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OSMOLARITY REGULATES GENE EXPRESSION IN INTERVERTEBRAL DISC CELLS QUANTIFIED WITH HIGH DENSITY OLIGONUCLEOTIDE ARRAY TECHNOLOGY *Boyd L M; *Chen J; ^Richardson W J; ^^Kraus VB; +*^Setton LA +*Department of Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, Durham, 919-660-5376, Fax:919-660-5362, [email protected] ^Department of Surgery, Division of Orthopaedic Surgery and ^^Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, Duke University Medical Center INTRODUCTION: Cells of the intervertebral disc respond to mechanical and biophysical stimuli in their environment, including deformations, hydrostatic and osmotic pressures [1]. Previous studies have shown that fibrochondrocytes of the disc respond to altered osmotic pressure with changes in post-translational biosynthesis of proteoglycans (i.e., 35S-incorporation) [2, 3], as well as changes in gene expression for type II collagen and select proteoglycans [4]. In other cell types, a wide range of genes are transcriptionally activated following exposure to hypo- or hyper-osmotic conditions [5]. We hypothesize that fibrochondrocytes of the intervertebral disc differentially respond to hypo- and hyper-osmotic conditions with changes in gene expression for a large number of proteins. In this study, the gene expression profile of human intervertebral disc cells was quantified with gene array technology following exposure to varying osmolarity in alginate culture in vitro. The results of the study demonstrate that genes encoding a broad functional range of proteins are regulated by osmotic conditions in cells of the intervertebral disc. METHODS: Cell culture. Human intervertebral disc tissue was obtained from patients (average age 51 yrs) undergoing surgery for interbody fusion (n=3) or herniation (n=1). Cells were isolated, passaged for two subcultures, and embedded in 1.2% crosslinked alginate beads (2×106 cells/ml) [4]. Cell-alginate beads were cultured for 4 hours in either iso-osmotic (F-12 medium; 293 mOsm/kg H2O), hypo-osmotic (medium diluted with distilled water; 255 mOsm/kg H2O) or hyper-osmotic media (medium with sucrose added; 450 mOsm/kg H2O). Immediately after osmotic treatment, cells were released from alginate, lysed and stored at –80°C. Gene Array. The Human Genome U133A array (Affymetrix) was used to study the expression of 22,283 gene sequences, transcript variants and expressed sequence tags. Total RNA was isolated from each cell sample and 10µg used for synthesis of cDNA. Biotin-labelled cRNA targets were made by in vitro transcription, fragmented and hybridized to the U133A array. After hybridization, arrays were stained with phycoerythrin and scanned for intensity values. Statistical determinations of the presence or absence of a given target were performed based on information from 10 - 20 sets of oligos for each gene (Microarray v5.0, Affymetrix). Data Analysis. The iso-osmotic condition was used as a control for assessment of genes differentially expressed under or hypo- (n=3) or hyper- osmotic (n=4) conditions. A global scaling algorithm was applied across all arrays. Pairwise comparisons were made between control and experimental arrays for each target gene based on intensity information from all oligo sets. A significant difference was noted where a Wilcoxon’s signed rank test detected a difference between “perfect match” and “mismatch” probe pair intensities (typically <0.003) and the change in intensity was 2-fold or greater relative to control values. Results are presented here for targets for which a significant difference was detected between control and experimental arrays in a majority of samples (2/3 for hypoand 3/4 for hyper-osmotic conditions). Genes that were significantly regulated by osmotic environment were classified by their biological functions using information provided by the array manufacturer (www.netaffx.com) and terminology defined by the Gene Ontology Consortium (www.geneontology.org). bolded categories discussed in text Classification Signal transduction/transcription Cell-cell interaction/adhesion Cytoskeleton Ion/small molecule transport Cell cycle/apoptosis Protease Growth factor/cytokine HYPO Inc 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Dec 5 3 1 1 0 0 1 HYPER Inc 5 0 0 3 3 1 1 Dec 3 1 0 1 5 0 2 RESULTS & DISCUSSION: A total of 8,704 transcripts were common to all samples cultured under iso-osmotic conditions (n=4). This number represents 81% of all transcripts found to be present in the cRNA target pool, averaged across all 4 human samples. For transcripts falling within the top 2% of highest average intensity values (n=174), a significant number related to extracellular matrix (21, 28%) and cytoskeleton proteins (12, 16%). Many of these proteins were recognized as important products of fibrochondrocyte biosynthesis, including types I, III and VI collagen, decorin, and fibronectin. Thus, the human intervertebral disc cells appear to retain important characteristics of the fibrochondrocytic phenotype in in vitro culture. Hypo-osmotic conditions. 18 transcripts were identified as significantly increased or decreased following exposure to hypo-osmotic conditions. Of these, 7 were related to either translation (i.e., ribosomal proteins), lipid or carbohydrate metabolism, or of unknown or poorly understood function. The remaining genes were categorized by function (Table). Genes encoding proteins involved in cytoskeletal-mediated signaling were downregulated, including a protein phosphatase (PTPG1/ PTPN12) known to dephosphorylate cytoskeletal and cell adhesion molecules, and an actin-binding protein known to inhibit GTPase activity (IQGAP-1). In articular chondrocytes and other cell types, hypo-osmotic shock induces changes in cell volume that are regulated by the breakdown and reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton [5,6]. Thus, the observed modification of gene expression for cytoskeletalmediated signaling molecules following hypo-osmotic shock is consistent with the idea that cytoskeletal changes occur in the disc cells studied here. Cell volume changes also regulate cell metabolism and growth [7], which may be linked to the finding that gene expression for the growth factor, TGF-β2, was down-regulated by hypo-osmotic conditions. The implication of this change is unknown as TGF-β has numerous functions in the cell, but may be important in regulating both biosynthesis and cell proliferation following hypo-osmotic shock. Hyper-osmotic conditions: 42 transcripts were significantly changed following exposure to hyper-osmotic conditions. As for hypo-osmotic conditions, several genes were involved in cytoskeletal-mediated signal transduction (UP: ephrin-B2 ligand (EFNB2), muskelin 1(MKLN1); DOWN: guanylate binding protein 1 (GBP1)). Furthermore, a number of genes were involved in ion/small molecule transport (UP: organic ion and inositol transporters, (SLC21A12 and SLC5A3); DOWN: monocarboxylic acid transporter, (SLC16A6)). Cells subjected to hyper-osmotic shock may experience regulatory volume changes that involve an influx of osmolytes via transport across the c ell membrane [5, 7, 8], which suggests why inositol transporter gene expression may be upregulated under hyper-osmotic conditions. Hyper-osmotic stimuli also resulted in increased gene expression for ADAMTS1, a disintegrintype metalloproteinase shown to be active in degrading aggrecan, as well as decreases in IL-6, a known inflammatory mediator in cartilage. We also found that a brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a central pain modulator of unknown function in the intervertebral disc, was upregulated under hyper-osmotic conditions. While the majority of the genes regulated by osmotic stimuli have poorly understood functions in the intervertebral disc, a significant number of genes were related to cytoskeleton and osmolyte transport. This pattern of gene expression may be expected in light of the cell volume changes that occur following altered osmotic conditions. Studies are ongoing to evaluate transient regulation and independent confirmation of the specific genes identified here. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Supported by funds from the NIH (1R01AR47442, 5T32GM08555). We acknowledge Dr. Holly Dressman for helpful discussions. REFERENCES: 1) Urban JPG, In: Musculo Soft-tissue Aging, 1993, AAOS;391-412. 2) Ishihara H et al., Am J Physiol 1997; C1499-C1506. 3) Bayliss MT et al., JOR 1986; 10-17. 4) Chen J et al., BBRC 2002; 932-38. 5) Waldegger S et al., J Mem Biol, 1998; 95-100. 6) Erickson G and Guilak F, Trans ORS, 2001; 180. 7) O'Neill WC, Am J Physiol Cell, 1999; C995-C1011. 8) Lang F et al., Physiol Rev, 1998; 247-306. 49th Annual Meeting of the Orthopaedic Research Society Poster #1133