4.6 Article

Single Cell RNA-Sequence Analyses Reveal Uniquely Expressed Genes and Heterogeneous Immune Cell Involvement in the Rat Model of Intervertebral Disc Degeneration

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app12168244

Keywords

intervertebral disc degeneration; single-cell RNA sequencing; cell type

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AR070975, R01AR078776, R01074441, T32EB028092]
  2. Orthopedic Research and Education Foundation [P20-03413]
  3. National Science Foundation [DGE-1745038]
  4. Rita Levi-Montalcini Postdoctoral Fellowship in Regenerative Medicine

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This study used single-cell RNA sequencing analysis to identify different cell types in degenerating intervertebral discs. The results showed an increase in myeloid and lymphoid cells in degenerated discs, and differential gene expression analysis revealed various cell types, indicating a high degree of immune specificity during disc degeneration. Additionally, the increased expression of Ngf and Ngfr in certain cell populations suggests that NGF signaling may play a key role in the interaction between immune and neuronal cells in the intervertebral disc.
Intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration is characterized by a loss of cellularity, and changes in cell-mediated activity that drives anatomic changes to IVD structure. In this study, we used single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis of degenerating tissues of the rat IVD following lumbar disc puncture. Two control, uninjured IVDs (L2-3, L3-4) and two degenerated, injured IVDs (L4-5, L5-6) from each animal were examined either at the two- or eight-week post-operative time points. The cells from these IVDs were extracted and transcriptionally profiled at the single-cell resolution. Unsupervised cluster analysis revealed the presence of four known cell types in both non-degenerative and degenerated IVDs based on previously established gene markers: IVD cells, endothelial cells, myeloid cells, and lymphoid cells. As a majority of cells were associated with the IVD cell cluster, sub-clustering was used to further identify the cell populations of the nucleus pulposus, inner and outer annulus fibrosus. The most notable difference between control and degenerated IVDs was the increase of myeloid and lymphoid cells in degenerated samples at two- and eight-weeks post-surgery. Differential gene expression analysis revealed multiple distinct cell types from the myeloid and lymphoid lineages, most notably macrophages and B lymphocytes, and demonstrated a high degree of immune specificity during degeneration. In addition to the heterogenous infiltrating immune cell populations in the degenerating IVD, the increased number of cells in the AF sub-cluster expressing Ngf and Ngfr, encoding for p75NTR, suggest that NGF signaling may be one of the key mediators of the IVD crosstalk between immune and neuronal cell populations. These findings provide the basis for future work to understand the involvement of select subsets of non-resident cells in IVD degeneration.

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