Journal of Biological Engineering (Dec 2018)

CD24 identifies nucleus pulposus progenitors/notochordal cells for disc regeneration

  • Zhuochao Liu,
  • Zhiyong Zheng,
  • Jin Qi,
  • Jun Wang,
  • Qi Zhou,
  • Fangqiong Hu,
  • Jing Liang,
  • Changwei Li,
  • Weibin Zhang,
  • Xingkai Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13036-018-0129-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Cell-based therapy by transplantation of nucleus pulposus (NP) progenitor/notochordal cells has been proposed as a promising way to halt and reverse the progression of disc degeneration. Although some studies have provided a broad panel of potential markers associated with the phenotype of notochordal cells, suitability of these markers for isolation of notochordal cells for the treatment of disc degeneration is unclear. Results Here, we found that the number of CD24-positive NP cells significantly decreased with increasing severity of disc degeneration. In addition, CD24-positive NP cells were shown to maintain their multipotent differentiation and self-renewal potential in vitro and to abundantly express brachyury, SHH, and GLUT-1, suggesting that CD24-positive NP cells are the progenitor/notochordal cells in the NP. Moreover, our in vivo experiments revealed that transplantation of CD24-positive NP cells enables the recovery of degenerate discs, as evidenced by increased disc height, restored magnetic resonance imaging T2-weighted signal intensity, and NP structure. In terms of the mechanism, HIF-1α–Notch1 pathway activation was essential for the maintenance of CD24-positive NP cells. Conclusion Our studies identify that CD24-positive NP cells are the resident progenitor/notochordal cells in disc regeneration and elucidate a crucial role of HIF-1α–Notch1 pathway in the phenotypic maintenance of CD24-positive NP cells.

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