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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXXVIII | Pages 31 - 31
1 Sep 2012
Gawri R Mwale F Ouellet JA Steffen T Roughley PJ Antoniou J Haglund L
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Purpose

Disc degeneration is known to occur early in adult life, but at present there is no medical treatment to reverse or even retard the problem. Development of medical treatments is complicated by the lack of a validated long term organ culture model in which therapeutic candidates can be studied. The objective of this study was to optimize and validate an organ culture system for intact human intervertebral disc (IVD), which could be used subsequently to determine whether synthetic peptide growth factors can stimulate disc cell metabolism and initiate a repair response.

Method

Seventy lumbar IVDs, from 14 individuals, were isolated within 24 h after death. Discs were prepared for organ culture by removing bony endplates but retaining cartilaginous endplates (CEP). Discs were cultured with no external load applied. The effects of glucose and FBS concentrations were evaluated. Dulbeccos Modified Eagle Media (DMEM) was supplemented with glucose, 4.5g/L or 1g/L, referred to as high and low (physiological) glucose, and FBS, 5% or 1%, referred to as high and low FBS, respectively. After a four week culture period, samples were taken across the disc using a 4 mm biopsy punch. Cell viability was analyzed using a live/dead fluorescence assay (Live/Dead, Invitrogen) and visualized by confocal microscopy. CEP discs were also placed in long term culture for four months, and cell viability was assessed. Western bolt analysis for the G1 domain of aggrecan was also performed to assess the effect of nutritional state on disc catabolism.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 563 - 563
1 Nov 2011
Mwale F Epure LM Yoshikawa T Hemmad A Bokar M Masuda K Roughley PJ Antoniou J
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Purpose: Intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration is associated with proteolytic degradation of proteoglycan aggregates present within the extracellular matrix of the disc. Link-N peptide is the N-terminal peptide of link protein, which stabilizes the proteoglycan aggregates. It is generated in vivo by proteolytic degradation during tissue turnover. We have previously shown that this peptide can stimulate the synthesis of proteoglycans and collagens by IVD cells in vitro. However, to date, there have been no reports on the effect of Link-N on the IVD in vivo. The purpose of the present study was to determine the effect of intradiscally administration of Link-N peptide on disc cell survival and extracellular matrix synthesis using a rabbit annular needle puncture model of IVD degeneration.

Method: Twelve New Zealand white rabbits (~3.5 kg; 5–6 months old) received an annular puncture with an 18-gauge needle on 2 non-contiguous discs (L2–L3 and L4–L5). The disc (L3–L4) between the punctured discs and that above (L5–L6) was left intact as internal controls. Two weeks after the initial puncture, the anterior surfaces of the previously punctured discs (L2–L3 and L4–L5) were injected with either saline (10 μl/disc) or Link-N (100 μg in 10μl saline/disc) into the center of the NP. Disc height was radiographically monitored biweekly. After 12 weeks post-injection, all the rabbits were euthanized and the IVDs from both experimental groups were removed from each lumbar spine for biochemical analysis. The nucleus pulposus (NP) was separated from the annulus fibrosus (AF), the specimens weighed (wet weight), the content of DNA measured using PicoGreen, and the total contents of sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAG) measured by the 1,9-dimethylmethylene blue (DMMB) assay.

Results: Following needle puncture that initiates disc degeneration, the disc height index (DHI) decreased by about 25%. By 6 weeks after Link-N injection, the mean percent DHI of injected discs in the Link-N group was higher than in the saline group. This difference in mean percent DHI was maintained during the rest of the follow-up. Puncturing the IVD also led to a decrease in proteoglycan content in both the NP and the AF in saline-treated discs. Treatment with Link-N stimulated proteoglycan synthesis (GAG) in both the NP and AF by about 20%. Link-N did not cause an increase in the DNA content of the discs.

Conclusion: Results of the present study show that Link-N can stimulate proteoglycan production in vivo when administered to degenerate disc. This stimulation occurs in both the NP and AF of the disc and in the absence of any effect on cell division. The changes observed with Link-N on proteoglycan synthesis are similar to those reported after injection of osteogenic protein-1 (OP-1) Thus, Link-N appears to be equally effective at stimulating repair of the IVD in vivo. One major advantage of Link-N over OP-1 for therapeutic use is the large saving in cost, Link-N being about 400 times cheaper than OP-1.