Mechanical loading of the intervertebral disc may contribute to disc
degeneration by initiating degeneration or by regulating cell-mediated
remodeling events that occur in response to the mechanical stimuli of daily
activity. This article is a review of the current knowledge of the role of
mechanical stimuli in regulating intervertebral disc cellular responses to
loading and the cellular changes that occur with degeneration.
Intervertebral disc cells exhibit diverse biologic responses to mechanical
stimuli, depending on the loading type, magnitude, duration, and anatomic zone
of cell origin. The innermost cells respond to low-to-moderate magnitudes of
static compression, osmotic pressure, or hydrostatic pressure with increases
in anabolic cell responses. Higher magnitudes of loading may give rise to
catabolic responses marked by elevated protease gene or protein expression or
activity. The key regulators of these mechanobiologic responses for
intervertebral disc cells will be the micromechanical stimuli experienced at
the cellular level, which are predicted to differ from that measured for the
extracellular matrix. Large hydrostatic pressures, but little volume change,
are predicted to occur for cells of the nucleus pulposus during compression,
while the highly oriented cells of the anulus fibrosus may experience
deformations in tension or compression during matrix deformations. In general,
the pattern of biologic response to applied loads suggests that the cells of
the nucleus pulposus and inner portion of the anulus fibrosus experience
comparable micromechanical stimuli in situ and may respond more similarly than
cells of the outer portion of the anulus fibrosus. Changes in these features
with degeneration are critically understudied, particularly
degeneration-associated changes in cell-level mechanical stimuli and the
associated mechanobiology.
Little is known of the mechanisms that regulate cellular responses to
intervertebral mechanobiology, nor is much known with regard to the precise
mechanical stimuli experienced by cells during loading. Mechanical factors
appear to regulate responses of the intervertebral disc cells through
mechanisms involving intracellular Ca2+ transients and cytoskeletal
remodeling that may regulate downstream effects such as gene expression and
posttranslational biosynthesis. Future studies should address the broader
biologic responses to mechanical stimuli in intervertebral disc
mechanobiology, the involved signaling mechanisms, and the apparently
important interactions among mechanical factors, genetic factors, cytokines,
and inflammatory mediators that may be critical in the regulation of
intervertebral disc degeneration.