2021 Volume No 41 pages 793-810
Title: Integrin-mediated interactions with a laminin-presenting substrate modulate biosynthesis and phenotypic expression for cells of the human nucleus pulposus |
Authors: J Speer, M Barcellona, L Jing, B Liu, M Lu, M Kelly, J Buchowski, L Zebala, S Luhmann, M Gupta, L Setton |
Address: Department of Biomedical Engineering, Washington
University in St. Louis, 1 Brookings Drive, Campus Box 1097, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA |
E-mail: setton at wustl.edu
|
Abstract: With aging and pathology, cells of the nucleus pulposus (NP) de-differentiate towards a fibroblast-like
phenotype, a change that contributes to degeneration of the intervertebral disc (IVD). Laminin isoforms are
a component of the NP extracellular matrix during development but largely disappear in the adult NP tissue.
Exposing human adult NP cells to hydrogels made from PEGylated-laminin-111 (PEGLM) has been shown
to regulate NP cell behaviors and promote cells to assume a biosynthetically active state with gene/protein
expression and morphology consistent with those observed in juvenile NP cells. However, the mechanism
regulating this effect has remained unknown. In the present study, the integrin subunits that promote adult
degenerative NP cell interactions with laminin-111 are identified by performing integrin blocking studies
along with assays of intracellular signaling and cell phenotype. The findings indicate that integrin α3 is a
primary regulator of cell attachment to laminin and is associated with phosphorylation of signaling molecules
downstream of integrin engagement (ERK 1/2 and GSK3β). Sustained effects of blocking integrin α3 were
also demonstrated including decreased expression of phenotypic markers, reduced biosynthesis, and altered
cytoskeletal organization. Furthermore, blocking both integrin α3 and additional integrin subunits elicited
changes in cell clustering, but did not alter the phenotype of single cells. These findings reveal that integrin-
mediated interactions through integrin α3 are critical in the process by which NP cells sense and alter
phenotype in response to culture upon laminin and further suggest that targeting integrin α3 has potential
for reversing or slowing degenerative changes to the NP cell. |
Key Words: Intervertebral disc, mechanobiology, biomaterials, signal transduction |
Publication date: June 23rd 2021 |
Article download: Pages
793-810 (PDF file) |