Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, School of Medicine, Orthopaedic Trauma Institute, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Division of Periodontology, Department of Orofacial Sciences, School of Dentistry, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Aging Cell. 2020 Mar;19(3):e13112. doi: 10.1111/acel.13112. Epub 2020 Feb 25.
The elderly population suffers from higher rates of complications during fracture healing that result in increased morbidity and mortality. Inflammatory dysregulation is associated with increased age and is a contributing factor to the myriad of age-related diseases. Therefore, we investigated age-related changes to an important cellular regulator of inflammation, the macrophage, and the impact on fracture healing outcomes. We demonstrated that old mice (24 months) have delayed fracture healing with significantly less bone and more cartilage compared to young mice (3 months). The quantity of infiltrating macrophages into the fracture callus was similar in old and young mice. However, RNA-seq analysis demonstrated distinct differences in the transcriptomes of macrophages derived from the fracture callus of old and young mice, with an up-regulation of M1/pro-inflammatory genes in macrophages from old mice as well as dysregulation of other immune-related genes. Preventing infiltration of the fracture site by macrophages in old mice improved healing outcomes, with significantly more bone in the calluses of treated mice compared to age-matched controls. After preventing infiltration by macrophages, the macrophages remaining within the fracture callus were collected and examined via RNA-seq analysis, and their transcriptome resembled macrophages from young calluses. Taken together, infiltrating macrophages from old mice demonstrate detrimental age-related changes, and depleting infiltrating macrophages can improve fracture healing in old mice.
老年人群在骨折愈合过程中更容易出现并发症,导致发病率和死亡率增加。炎症失调与年龄增长有关,是许多与年龄相关疾病的一个促成因素。因此,我们研究了炎症的一个重要细胞调节因子——巨噬细胞与年龄相关的变化,以及其对骨折愈合结果的影响。我们发现,与年轻小鼠(3 个月)相比,老年小鼠(24 个月)的骨折愈合时间明显延迟,骨量更少,软骨更多。老年和年轻小鼠的骨折痂内浸润的巨噬细胞数量相似。然而,RNA-seq 分析表明,老年和年轻小鼠骨折痂来源的巨噬细胞的转录组存在明显差异,老年小鼠的 M1/促炎基因上调,以及其他免疫相关基因失调。在老年小鼠的骨折部位阻止巨噬细胞浸润改善了愈合结果,与年龄匹配的对照组相比,治疗组的骨痂中有更多的骨。在阻止巨噬细胞浸润后,收集并通过 RNA-seq 分析分析骨折痂内剩余的巨噬细胞,其转录组与来自年轻骨痂的巨噬细胞相似。总之,来自老年小鼠的浸润巨噬细胞表现出有害的与年龄相关的变化,而耗尽浸润的巨噬细胞可以改善老年小鼠的骨折愈合。