Yang Shufeng, Ding Wei, Feng Dapeng, Gong Haiyang, Zhu Dongmei, Chen Bin, Chen Jianmin
Department of Orthopedics, The 81st Hospital of PLA, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China.
Department of Radiotherapy, The 81st Hospital of PLA, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China.
APMIS. 2015 Nov;123(11):975-85. doi: 10.1111/apm.12439. Epub 2015 Aug 25.
The process of bone regeneration after fracture is a complex and well-orchestrated process usually requiring 3-12 weeks. A subset of patients, however, exhibit delayed healing time and even incomplete restoration of the normal bone structure. Although the precise mechanism is unknown, studies have shown that smurf1 may play a role during the process. Here, we sought to determine the involvement of the immune system in impaired bone healing. We found that immediately after fracture, the B-cell composition was shifted toward increased frequency of plasmablasts and decreased frequency of naïve B cells, reflecting higher inflammatory status. The percentage of CD19(+) CD24(+) CD38(+) regulatory B cells was also upregulated in response to bone fracture. The production of IL-10, a pivotal cytokine in regulatory B-cell function, was upregulated in all patients. Interestingly, the increase in IL-10 production was only sustained throughout the healing course in normal healing patients but not in delayed healing patients. Rather, delayed healing patients downregulated B-cell IL-10 secretion early and had reduced level of regulatory B-cell activity. Together, these data revealed a role of regulatory B cells in the endogenous bone regeneration process and an alternation in B-cell-mediated regulation in delayed healing patients.