Paraspinal myopathy-induced intervertebral disc degeneration and thoracolumbar kyphosis in TSC1mKO mice model—a preliminary study

•TSC1 gene knockout in a mouse resulted in paraspinal muscle myopathy.•TSC1mKO mice is by far, the best model to study the pathological consequence of sarcopenia.•Paraspinal muscle myopathy was established as early as 9 months.•TSC1mKO mice developed disc degeneration and disc wedging at 9 months.•K...

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Veröffentlicht in:The spine journal 2022-03, Vol.22 (3), p.483-494
Hauptverfasser: Hey, Hwee Weng Dennis, Lam, Wing Moon Raymond, Chan, Chloe Xiaoyun, Zhuo, Wen-Hai, Crombie, Elisa Marie, Tan, Tuan Chun, Chen, Way Cherng, Cool, Simon, Tsai, Shih Yin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•TSC1 gene knockout in a mouse resulted in paraspinal muscle myopathy.•TSC1mKO mice is by far, the best model to study the pathological consequence of sarcopenia.•Paraspinal muscle myopathy was established as early as 9 months.•TSC1mKO mice developed disc degeneration and disc wedging at 9 months.•Kyphosis of the spine with disc height loss and vertebral body wedging followed. Increasing kyphosis of the spine in a human is a well-recognized clinical phenomenon that has been associated with back pain, poor physical performance and disability. The pathophysiology of age-related kyphosis is complex and has been associated with physiological changes in vertebrae, intervertebral disc (IVD) and paraspinal musculature, which current cross-sectional studies are unable to demonstrate. Creating an in vivo, paraspinal myopathic animal model for longitudinal study of these changes under controlled conditions is thus warranted. To confirm the TSC1 gene knockout effect on paraspinal muscle musculature; to analyze the development of spinal kyphosis, IVD degeneration and vertebra structural changes in a longitudinal manner to gain insights into the relationship between these processes. A prospective cohort study of 28 female mice, divided into 4 groups—9-month-old TSC1mKO (n=7), 9-month-old control (n=4), 12-month-old TSC1mKO (n=8), and 12-month-old controls (n=9). High resolution micro-computed tomography was used to measure sagittal spinal alignment (Cobb's angle), vertebral height, vertebral body wedging, disc height index (DHI), disc wedge index (DWI), histomorphometry of trabecular bone and erector spinae muscle cross-sectional area. Paraspinal muscle specimens were harvested to assess for myopathic features with H&E stain, muscle fiber size, density of triangular fiber and central nucleus with WGA/DAPI stain, and percentage of fibers with PGC-1α stain. Intervertebral discs were evaluated for disc score using FAST stain. Compared to controls, paraspinal muscle sections revealed features of myopathy in TSC1mKO mice similar to human sarcopenic paraspinal muscle. While there was significantly greater presence of small triangular fiber and density of central nucleus in 9-and 12-month-old TSC1mKO mice, significantly larger muscle fibers and decreased erector spinae muscle cross-sectional area were only found in 12-month-old TSC1mKO mice compared to controls. TSC1mKO mice developed accelerated thoracolumbar kyphosis, with significantly larger Cobb angles found only at 12 m
ISSN:1529-9430
1878-1632
DOI:10.1016/j.spinee.2021.09.003