| Literature DB >> 33003542 |
Mohamed Mahmoud1, Maria Kokozidou1, Alexander Auffarth2, Gundula Schulze-Tanzil1.
Abstract
The number of diabetic patients grows constantly worldwide. Many patients suffer simultaneously from diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) and intervertebral disc disease (IVDD), suggesting a strong link between T2DM and IVDD. T2DM rodent models provide versatile tools to study this interrelation. We hypothesized that the previously achieved studies in rodents approved it. Performing a search in the publicly available electronic databases according to our inclusion (e.g., experimental study with clearly outlined methods investigating IVDD in diabetic rodent models) and exclusion (e.g., non-experimental) criteria, we included 23 studies from 1992 to 2020 analyzing different aspects of IVDD in diabetic rodents, such as on pathogenesis (e.g., effects of hyperglycemia on IVD cells, sirtuin (SIRT)1/p53 axis in the interrelation between T2DM and IVDD), risk factors (e.g., high content of advanced glycation end-products (AGEs) in modern diets), therapeutical approaches (e.g., insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I)), and prophylaxis. Regarding their quality, 12 studies were classified as high, six as moderate, and five as low. One strong, 18 moderate, and three mild evidences of the link between DM and IVDD in rodents were found, while only one study has not approved this link. We concluded that T2DM has a devastating effect on IVD, particularly in advanced cases, which needs to be further evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: annulus fibrosus; culture; cytokines; diabetes mellitus type II; diabetic rat models; glucose; insulin; intervertebral disc degeneration; leptin; nucleus pulposus; obesity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33003542 PMCID: PMC7600368 DOI: 10.3390/cells9102208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Lumbar intervertebral discs (IVD) of humans and rats. (A): degenerated human lumbar IVD—it is Thompson grade 4 or Ray grade 2 since fissures are detectable, extending from NP through the AF [17]. (B): Heterozygote Zucker diabetes fatty (ZDF/fa) rat-derived healthy lumbar IVD. (B1): Healthy rat IVD in situ (sagittal plane). (B2): Explanted rat IVD (transverse plane). (B3): Microscopical view of explanted IVD (transverse plane). (B4,B5): Longitudinal section (sagittal plane). (B4): Hematoxylin-Eosin-stained healthy rat IVD. Red arrow: notochord-derived cells forming band-like structure. (B5): Alcian blue-stained rat IVD: glycosaminoglycans are blue. AF, annulus fibrosus, NP, nucleus pulposus. Scale bars (B1): 2 mm, (A,B2): 1 mm, (B3): 400 µm, (B4,B5): 100 µm.
Classification of the totally collected manuscripts up to May 2020.
| Topic | Number of Collected Publications |
|---|---|
| IVDD | 9511 |
| IVDD in rats | 2144 |
| IVDD in diabetic cases | 1528 |
| IVDD in diabetic rodent models | 27 |
IVDD: intervertebral disc degeneration.
Figure 2Flowchart of the search strategy and screening process. DM: diabetes mellitus, IVDD: intervertebral disc degeneration.
Literature selection.
| Studies (n) | Status | Cause | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9484 | excluded | irrelevant | Reviews, retrospective, and prospective clinical, epidemiological, cross-sectional studies, etc. |
| 2 | excluded | not applicable | Reviews of animal models (no experiments) |
| 2 | excluded | irrelevant | Experimental: |
| 1st study: IVDD, rat model, and adiponectin | |||
| 2nd study: DM, rat model, and spine injury | |||
| 23 | included | relevant | Experimental (DM, IVDD, and rodents) |
DM: diabetes mellitus, IVDD: intervertebral disc degeneration.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria (V/V) | Exclusion Criteria (I–V/V) |
|---|---|
| Experimental with clearly described methods (I) | Non-experimental (review, clinical, case report, etc.) (I) |
| T2DM (II) | Deficient of DM (II) or IVDD (III) or rodent model (IV) |
| IVDD (III) | Unclear methods (V) |
| Rodent models (IV) | |
| Study of pathogenesis, RF, treatment, prophylactic agent | |
| Remark: to be included, the selected papers should fulfill five criteria (V/V) | Remark: one criterion up to four criteria is/are enough to exclude the papers (I-V/V) |
DM: diabetes mellitus, IVDD: intervertebral disc degeneration, RF: risk factor.
Included studies (The results and aims are mainly cited in the own words of the original authors).
| Authors | Title | Aim | Focus | Rodent Model Type | Methods | Key Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Ziv et al., 1992 [ | Physicochemi-cal Properties of the Aging and Diabetic Sand Rat Intervertebral Disc | Understanding of the changes in the physiochemical properties of intervertebral discs (IVDs) in the aged and diabetic rats | Physiochemical properties | 180 IVDs were extracted from forty-five desert sand rats (gender information not provided) divided into three equal groups: | -Rat DM model | -Discs of young diabetic rats demonstrated decreased hydration, fixed charged density and ability to resist compression under osmotic pressures as compared with the young and healthy discs and were more similar to the discs from old rats and from human |
| (2) Chen et al., 2013 [ | The correlation between microvessel pathological changes of the endplate (EP) and degeneration of the intervertebral disc in diabetic rats | Identifying the possible mechanism, by which DM induces degeneration of the INDs with focus on microvessel density (MVD) in the EP | Pathogenesis: microvessel density in the EP | 30 three-month-old male adult Sprague Dawley (SD) rats. | -Rat DM model | -Expression of collagen type I in the DM group was higher than in controls in contrast to collagen type Ⅱ |
| (3) Illien-Junger et al., 2013 [ | Combined Anti-Inflammatory and Anti- Advanced Glycation End-products (AGE) Drug Treatments Have a Protective Effect on IVDs in Mice with Diabetes | Investigation of the effectivity of oral treatments with a combination of anti-inflammatory and anti-AGE drugs in preventing diabetes-induced degenerative changes to the spine (IVD and vertebral bone density) | Prophylaxis | Three age-matched groups of 21 female ROP-Os mice (group size 6-8 animals): | -Mice DM model | -Diabetic mice exhibited pathological changes: IVD height↓, vertebral bone mass↓, glycosaminoglycans (GAGs)↓ and morphological alterations of IVDs with focal highly expressed TNFα, MMP-13 and ADAMTS-5 |
| (4) Jiang et al., 2013 [ | Apoptosis, Senescence, and Autophagy in Rat Nucleus Pulposus Cells: Implications for Diabetic IVD Degeneration | Studying of the mechanisms by which DM aggravates IVDD and discussing of the relationship between autophagy and IDD in NP cells | Pathogenesis | Two groups of thirty-four 2-month-old male SD rats (STZ) | -Rat DM model | -Higher levels of autophagy in NP cells of diabetic rats than control rats (statistically significant) |
| (5) Fields et al., 2015 [ | Alterations in IVD composition, matrix homeostasis and biomechanical behavior in the UCD-T2DM rat model of type 2 diabetes | Approving of the role of DM in causation of IVDD and in turn low back pain (LBP) | Pathogenesis | One diabetic and two non-diabetic groups (gender not mentioned): | -Rat DM model | -DM: GAG and water contents↓ vertebral EP thickness↑, EP porosity↓, AGE level↑ |
| (6) Illien-Junger et al., 2015 [ | Chronic Ingestion of Advanced Glycation End Products (AGEs) Induces Degenerative Spinal Changes and Hypertrophy in Aging Pre-Diabetic Mice | Investigation of the role of specific AGE precursors on IVDD and vertebral pathologies in aging mice that were fed isocaloric diets with standard or reduced amounts of MG-derivatives | Risk factor | Two groups of aging C57BL/6 mice (gender not mentioned) | -Mice prediabetic model | Chronic exposure to dietary MG/AGEs leads to: |
| (7) Park et al., 2016 [ | Increased Apoptosis, Expression of Matrix Degrading Enzymes and Inflammatory Cytokines of AF Cells in Genetically Engineered Diabetic Rats: Implication for IVDD | Investigation of the effect of DM on apoptosis, expression of matrix degrading enzymes and inflammatory cytokines in cells of IVDs derived from genetically engineered OLETF (diabetic) and LETO (control) rats | Pathogenesis | Two rat groups: | -Rat DM model | -OLETF rats showed increased body weight and abnormal 2-h glucose tolerance tests compared to LETO rats |
| (8) An et al., 2017 [ | Vitamin D (calcitriol) improves the content of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1 in IVD of diabetic rats | Testing of protective effect of Vit. D against IVDD in DM | Prophylaxis | 55 SD rats were divided into three groups (gender not mentioned): | -Rat DM model | -Histology revealed degenerative changes in discs of experimental and control group at three different time points, while there were no changes in discs in normal group |
| (9) Kameda et al., 2017 [ | Investigation of the effect of diabetes on radiculopathy induced by NP | Evaluation of the effect of DM on radiculopathy due to lumbar disc herniation (LDH), by investigating pain-related behavior and the expression of TNF-α and growth-associated protein (GAP)43 in type 2 diabetic rats following application of NP to the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) | Pathogenesis | Two groups: | -Rat DM models | -Mechanical withdrawal threshold significantly declined in the non-DM NP group compared to the non-DM sham group for 28 days, whereas the decline in threshold extended to 35 days in the DM NP group compared to the DM sham group |
| (10) Krishna-moorthy et al., 2018 [ | Dietary AGE consumption leads to mechanical stiffening of murine IVDs | Testing the hypothesis that chronic consumption of high AGE diets results in sex-specific IVD structural disruption and functional changes | Risk factor | mice model: | -Mice DM model (both sexes) | -High AGE diet resulted in AGE accumulation in IVDs and increased IVD compressive stiffness, particularly in females |
| (11) Li et al., 2020 [ | IVDD in mice with type II diabetes induced by leptin receptor deficiency | Studying of the effects of T2DM on IVDD in leptin receptor-deficient knockout mice model. | Therapy | Three groups: | -Mice DM model | -Blood glucose levels were significantly higher in the db/db mice |
| (12) Natelson et al., 2020 [ | Leptin signaling and the IVD: Sex dependent effects of leptin receptor deficiency and Western diet on the spine in a T2DM mouse model | Investigating, if obesity and DM type II cause spinal pathology in a sex-specific manner using in vivo diabetic and dietary mouse models | Risk factor | Four groups of mice models were used: | -Mice DM model | -Dietary effects on bone structure in Db/Db mice were sex-dependent and evident in females but not males |
| (13) Tsai et al., 2014 [ | AGEs in Degenerative NP with Diabetes | Investigation of the effect of AGEs on the degeneration process in diabetic NP and NP cells in rats and humans | Pathogenesis | Nine 8-week-old male SD-rats were divided into two groups:-Non-diabetic (n = 4) | -Rat DM model | -Immunohistochemical expression of AGEs was significantly↑ in diabetic human and rat-derived discs |
| (14) Zhang et al., 2019 [ | The sirtuin (Sirt)1/p53 Axis in Diabetic IVDD Pathogenesis and Therapeutics | Understanding of the relation between DM and IVDD, in particular the Sirt1/p53 axis in NP cells which may be involved in the pathogenesis of diabetic IDD and may also serve as a therapeutic target for diabetic IDD | Specific pathogenesis | Forty-eight adult male SD rats divided into four groups (12 males for group): | -Rat DM model | -High glucose may promote the incidence of apoptosis and senescence in NP cells in vitro |
| (15) Park et al., 2013 [ | High glucose-induced oxidative stress promotes autophagy through mitochondrial damage in rat notochordal cells | Evaluation of the effects of high glucose concentrations | Pathogenesis | Only one non-diabetic group (four-week-old male SD rats), from which the NPs have been harvested before exposed to hyperglycemic or normoglycemic conditions. | -Rat DM model | -An enhanced disruption of mitochondrial transmembrane potential, which indicates mitochondrial damage, was identified in rat notochordal cells treated with both high glucose concentrations. |
| (16) Park et al., 2013 [ | Dose- and time-dependent effect of high glucose concentration on viability of notochordal cells and expression of matrix degrading and fibrotic enzymes | Understanding of the effect of the duration and severity of DM (using high glucose concentrations: 0.1, 0.2, 0.4 M glucose) on viability of notochordal cells and IVDD | Risk factor | Only one non-diabetic group (four-week-old male SD rats), from which the NPs have been harvested before exposed to hyper- or normoglycemic conditions. | -Rat DM model | -High glucose significantly decreased proliferation and increased apoptosis of notochordal cells from culture days one to seven in a dose-dependent manner |
| (17) Kong et al., 2014 [ | High Glucose Accelerates Autophagy in Adult Rat IVD Cells | Investigation of the effect of high glucose (0.1, 0.2 M) on autophagy in adult rat AF and NP cells | Pathogenesis | One group of 24-week-old male SD rats, from which the NP and AF cells have been harvested before exposed to hyper- or normoglycemic conditions. | -Rat DM model | -High glucose significantly increased the expressions of autophagy markers beclin-1, LC3-II, Atg3, 5, 7, and 12 in adult rat NP and AF cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner |
| (18) Park et al., 2014 [ | Accelerated premature stress-induced senescence of young AF cells of rats by high glucose-induced oxidative stress | Investigation of the effect of high glucose (0.1, 0.2 M glucose) on mitochondrial damage, oxidative stress and senescence of young AF cells | Pathogenesis | Only one non-diabetic group (four-week-old male SD rats), from which the AFs have been harvested before exposed to hyper- or normoglycemic conditions. | -Rat DM model | -High glucose enhanced in a dose- and time-dependent manner: |
| (19) Kong et al., 2014 [ | Effect of High Glucose on Stress-Induced Senescence of NP Cells of Adult Rats | Investigation of the effect of diabetes mellitus (DM) on senescence of adult | Pathogenesis | One group of 24-week-old male SD rats, from which the NP cells have been harvested before exposed to hyper- or normoglycemic conditions. | -Rat DM model | High glucose: |
| (20) Park et al., 2015 [ | Rat Notochordal Cells Undergo Premature Stress-Induced Senescence by High Glucose | Investigation of the effect of high glucose (0.1, 0.2 M) on premature stress-induced senescence of rat notochordal cells | Pathogenesis | One group of 4-week-old male SD rats, from which IVD notochordal cells have been harvested | -Rat DM model | High glucose enhanced in notochordal cells at 1 and 3 days: |
| (21) Cheng et al., 2016 [ | High Glucose-Induced Oxidative Stress Mediates Apoptosis and ECM Metabolic Imbalances Possibly via p38 MAPK Activation in Rat NP Cells | To investigate whether high glucose-induced oxidative stress is implicated in apoptosis of rat NP cells and abnormal expression of critical genes involved in the metabolic balance of ECM | Pathogenesis | One 12-week-old male Wistar rats model group, from which NPs were harvested High glucose (5, 15, 25 mM) | -Rat DM model | High glucose |
| (22) Jiang et al., 2018 [ | High Glucose-Induced Excessive ROS Promote Apoptosis Through Mitochondrial Damage in Rat CEP cells | Evaluation of the effects of high glucose (0.1, 0.2 M) on CEP cells and to identify the mechanisms of those effects | Pathogenesis | A group of three 6-month-old male SD rats, from which CEPs were harvested | -Rat DM model | -High glucose significantly increased apoptosis and ROS accumulation in CEP cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner. |
| (23) Jiang et al., 2020 [ | Long non-coding RNA metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1 (MALAT1) promotes high glucose-induced rat cartilage EP cell apoptosis via the p38/MAPK signaling pathway | Evaluation of the roles of MALAT1 in the apoptosis of CEP cells induced by high glucose (25 mM) and to explore the mechanisms underlying this effect | Specified Pathogenesis | A group of three 12-week-old male SD rats, from which CEPs were harvested | -Rat DM model | -Results revealed that high glucose concentration promoted apoptosis and enhanced expression of MALAT1 in CEP cells. |
Color code: white: in vivo studies, dark grey: combined in vitro/in vivo studies, grey: in vitro studies. Remark: since all studies comprised statistical analysis, it was not listed under “methods”. ADAMTS: A disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs, AGE: Advanced glycation end-products, AI: apoptotic index, Atg3: autophagy related 3, Bax: Bcl-2 associated protein X, Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma 2, BSA: bovine serum albumin, CEP: cartilage endplate, CML: Ne-carboxymethyl lysine, DM: diabetes mellitus, DHI: Disc height index, DRG: dorsal root ganglion, ECM: extracellular matrix, EP: endplate, GAG: glycosaminoglycans, GAP43: Growth-associated protein 43, GK rat: Goto-Kakizaki rat, Iba1: Ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule-1, IGF-1: insulin-like growth factor, IL: interleukin, IVD(D): intervertebral disc (degeneration), MALAT1: Long non-coding RNA metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1, MG: Methylglyoxal, MMP: matrix-metalloproteinase, µCT: micro-computer tomography, MnSOD: Manganese superoxide dismutase, MVD: microvessel density, PI: propidium iodide, pRB: retinoblastoma protein, RAGE: Receptor for advanced glycation end-products, ROS: reactive oxygen species, ROP-O: radiation-induced oligosyndactyly mice, SD: Sprague Dawley rats, STZ: Streptozoicin, SOX9: Sex-determining region SRY of the Y chromosome, TEM: Transmission electron microscopy, TIMP: Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases, TNF: tumor necrosis factor, TGF: transforming growth factor, TUNEL, vWF: von Willebrand factor, WT: wild type.
Study evaluation with SSS.
| Authors | Abstract | Research | Aim | Methods | Results | Scoring | Quality | Evidence Strength of | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Question | IVDD and DM Relation | ||||||||
| (1) Ziv et al., 1992 [ | 3 | 5 | 5 | 3 (in vivo) | 3 | 19 | Moderate | 3 (BC,B,S) | Moderate |
| (2) Chen et al., 2013 [ | 4 | 5 | 5 | 5 (in vivo) | 5 | 24 | High | 3 (H,I,S) | Moderate |
| (3) Illien-Junger et al., 2013 [ | 4 | 5 | 5 | 4 (in vivo) | 4 | 22 | High | 5 (H,I,BC,IM,S) | Moderate |
| (4) Jiang et al., 2013 [ | 3 | 5 | 5 | 5 (in vivo) | 5 | 23 | High | 5 (H,I,BC,M,S) | Moderate |
| (5) Fields et al., 2015 [ | 3 | 5 | 4 | 5 (in vivo) | 5 | 22 | High | 7(H,I,BC,M,B,IM,S) | Strong |
| (6) Illien-Junger et al., 2015 [ | 3 | 5 | 5 | 5 (in vivo) | 5 | 23 | High | 5 (H,I,BC,IM,S) | Moderate |
| Analyses partly only qualitative | |||||||||
| (7) Park et al., 2016 [ | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 (in vivo) | 4 | 20 | Moderate | 5 (H,I,BC,M,S) | Strong |
| (8) An et al., 2017 [ | 4 | 5 | 5 | 4 (in vivo) | 4 | 22 | High | 3 (H,I,S) | Moderate |
| (9) Kameda et al., 2017 [ | 5 | 5 | 5 | 4 (in vivo) | 4 | 23 | High | 3 (I,C,S) | Moderate |
| (10) Krishnamoorthy et al., 2018 [ | 3 | 4 | 4 | 3 (in vivo) | 4 | 18 | Moderate | 4 (H,I,B,S) | Moderate |
| (11) Li et al., 2020 [ | 5 | 5 | 5 | 5 (in vivo) | 5 | 25 | High | 6(H,I,BC,M,IM,S) | Strong |
| (12) Natelson et al., 2020 [ | 5 | 3 | 3 | 3 (in vivo) | 4 | 18 | Moderate | 0 | Absent |
| (13) Tsai et al., 2014 [ | 4 | 5 | 5 | 5 (in vivo and in vitro) | 4 | 23 | High | 4 (I,BC,M,S) | Moderate |
| (14) Zhang et al., 2019 [ | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 (in vivo and in vitro) | 4 | 19 | Moderate | 5 (H,I,BC,IM,S) | Strong |
| (15) Park et al., 2013 [ | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 (in vitro) | 4 | 21 | High | 3 (I,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (16) Park et al., 2013 [ | 5 | 2 | 2 | 3 (in vitro) | 3 | 15 | Low | 3 (I,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (17) Kong et al., 2014 [ | 5 | 2 | 2 | 2 (in vitro) | 3 | 14 | Low | 2 (I,S) | Low |
| (18) Park et al., 2014 [ | 5 | 2 | 2 | 3 (in vitro) | 3 | 15 | Low | 3 (I,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (19) Kong et al., 2015 [ | 5 | 2 | 2 | 2 (in vitro) | 3 | 14 | Low | 3 (I,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (20) Park et al., 2015 [ | 5 | 2 | 2 | 4 (in vitro) | 3 | 16 | Moderate | 3 (I,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (21) Cheng et al., 2016 [ | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 (in vitro) | 4 | 21 | High | 4 (I,M,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (22) Jiang et al., 2020 [ | 3 | 4 | 4 | 4 (in vitro) | 4 | 15 | Low | 3 (I,BC,S) | Moderate |
| (23) Jiang et al., 2018 [ | 4 | 4 | 4 | 5 (in vitro) | 5 | 22 | High | 3 (I,M,S) | Moderate |
| Remarks: | |||||||||
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Criteria for abstract evaluation: clarity, conciseness, readability, completeness, and outline. | |||||||||
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Criteria for the research question (RQ): feasible, interesting, novel, ethical, and relevant. | |||||||||
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Criteria for aim evaluation: realistic, experimentally possible, clinically applicable, and profitable. | |||||||||
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Criteria for methods evaluation: appropriate, efficient, experimentally available, and comprehensive. | |||||||||
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Criteria for results evaluation: reliability, absence of bias, validity, applicability, and measurability. | |||||||||
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Study scoring system (SSS): it is a point-based system, which includes 25 points, 5 points for each item. | |||||||||
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Quality assessment (QA): depends on the gained points in the SSS: high quality (21–25 points); moderate quality (16–20 points); low quality (≤ 15 points). | |||||||||
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Evidence of IVDD and DM relation: strong (≥ 5 indicators), moderate (3–4 indicators), low (1–2 indicators), and absent (0 indicators). Indicators are histopathology (H), immunohistochemistry (I), molecular biology (M), biochemistry (BC), imaging (IM), biomechanics (B), statistics (S), the coincidence between results in rat model tissues and human tissues, reversal or inhibition of pathological findings in IVDD by tested therapies and/or clinical manifestation of IVDD in rats in the incubation period before scarification (C). | |||||||||
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The evidences of the studies, which were achieved in vitro, are related mainly to the effect of glucose on IVD cells in vitro, not to the effect of DM as a disease on IVD tissues in vivo/rat models. | |||||||||
H: histopathology (tissue alterations detected by histological staining), I: immunodetection (antibody-assisted detection of tissue/cell components, including immunohistochemistry, flow cytometry, Western blot, ELISA), M: molecular biology (PCR), BC: biochemistry (e.g., TUNEL, GAG, and other assays, such as proliferation, IM: imaging (µ-CT, MRI, X-ray), B: biomechanics (biomechanical testing procedures), S: statistics (statistical tests), C: clinical manifestation (pain tests, etc.).
Figure 3Summary of pathological T2DM-associated changes in components of the motion segment. Based on the literature summarized in Table 4. Molecular events in the IVD are depicted in Figure 4. AF: annulus fibrosus, BEP: bony endplate, CEP: cartilaginous endplate, T2DM: type 2 diabetes mellitus, NP: nucleus pulposus, IVD: intervertebral disc, ↓: decrease, ↑: increase.
Figure 4Crucial aspects of the linked pathogenesis of IVDD in T2DM are identified using rodent models. Data depicted here was extracted from studies summarized in Table 4. ADAMTS: a disintegrin and metalloproteinase with thrombospondin motifs, AGE: advanced glycosylation end-products, Bax: Bcl-2 associated protein X, Bcl-2: B-cell lymphoma 2, ECM: extracellular matrix, GAG: glycosaminoglycans, IGF-1: insulin growth factor-1, IL: interleukin, IVDD: intervertebral disc degeneration, MMP: matrix metalloproteinase, RAGE: a receptor for advanced glycation end-products, ROS: reactive oxygen species, SIRT: sirtuin, pRB: retinoblastoma protein, SOX9: sex-determining region SRY of the Y chromosome, TIMPs: tissue-specific inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases, TNFα: tumor necrosis factor α, T2DM: diabetes mellitus type II, TGFβ: transforming growth factor β.