4.6 Article

Inducing Angiogenesis in the Nucleus Pulposus

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12202488

Keywords

intervertebral disc; angiogenesis; osteogenesis; fusion; gene delivery; proteoglycanase nucleus pulposus

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This study investigated the possibility of inducing bone formation and angiogenesis in the intervertebral discs (IVDs) by manipulating the IVD environment. The results showed that gene delivery and proteoglycanase treatment can promote bone and vascular growth in the IVD. However, proteoglycanase treatment impaired bone formation and reduced histological staining in the IVD.
Bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) gene delivery to Lewis rat lumbar intervertebral discs (IVDs) drives bone formation anterior and external to the IVD, suggesting the IVD is inhospitable to osteogenesis. This study was designed to determine if IVD destruction with a proteoglycanase, and/or generating an IVD blood supply by gene delivery of an angiogenic growth factor, could render the IVD permissive to intra-discal BMP-driven osteogenesis and fusion. Surgical intra-discal delivery of naive or gene-programmed cells (BMP2/BMP7 co-expressing or VEGF165 expressing) +/- purified chondroitinase-ABC (chABC) in all permutations was performed between lumbar 4/5 and L5/6 vertebrae, and radiographic, histology, and biomechanics endpoints were collected. Follow-up anti-sFlt Western blotting was performed. BMP and VEGF/BMP treatments had the highest stiffness, bone production and fusion. Bone was induced anterior to the IVD, and was not intra-discal from any treatment. chABC impaired BMP-driven osteogenesis, decreased histological staining for IVD proteoglycans, and made the IVD permissive to angiogenesis. A soluble fragment of VEGF Receptor-1 (sFlt) was liberated from the IVD matrix by incubation with chABC, suggesting dysregulation of the sFlt matrix attachment is a possible mechanism for the chABC-mediated IVD angiogenesis we observed. Based on these results, the IVD can be manipulated to foster vascular invasion, and by extension, possibly osteogenesis.

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