Knights Alexander J, Farrell Easton C, Ellis Olivia M, Song Michelle J, Appleton C Thomas, Maerz Tristan
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
bioRxiv. 2023 Oct 5:2023.10.03.559514. doi: 10.1101/2023.10.03.559514.
Synovium is home to immune and stromal cell types that orchestrate inflammation following a joint injury; in particular, macrophages are central protagonists in this process. We sought to define the cellular and temporal dynamics of the synovial immune niche in a mouse model of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PTOA), and to identify stromal-immune crosstalk mechanisms that coordinate macrophage function and phenotype.
We induced PTOA in mice using a non-invasive tibial compression model of anterior cruciate ligament rupture (ACLR). Single cell RNA-seq and flow cytometry were used to assess immune cell populations in healthy (Sham) and injured (7d and 28d post-ACLR) synovium. Characterization of synovial macrophage polarization states was performed, alongside computational modeling of macrophage differentiation, as well as implicated transcriptional regulators and stromal-immune communication axes.
Immune cell types are broadly represented in healthy synovium, but experience drastic expansion and speciation in PTOA, most notably in the macrophage portion. We identified several polarization states of macrophages in synovium following joint injury, underpinned by distinct transcriptomic signatures, and regulated in part by stromal-derived macrophage colony-stimulating factor signaling. The transcription factors Pu.1, Cebpα, Cebpβ, and Jun were predicted to control differentiation of systemically derived monocytes into pro-inflammatory synovial macrophages.
We defined different synovial macrophage subpopulations present in healthy and injured mouse synovium. Nuanced characterization of the distinct functions, origins, and disease kinetics of macrophage subtypes in PTOA will be critical for targeting these highly versatile cells for therapeutic purposes.
滑膜是免疫细胞和基质细胞类型的所在之处,这些细胞在关节损伤后协调炎症反应;特别是巨噬细胞是这一过程的核心参与者。我们试图确定创伤后骨关节炎(PTOA)小鼠模型中滑膜免疫微环境的细胞和时间动态,并确定协调巨噬细胞功能和表型的基质-免疫串扰机制。
我们使用前交叉韧带断裂(ACLR)的非侵入性胫骨压缩模型在小鼠中诱导PTOA。单细胞RNA测序和流式细胞术用于评估健康(假手术)和受伤(ACLR后7天和28天)滑膜中的免疫细胞群体。对滑膜巨噬细胞极化状态进行了表征,同时对巨噬细胞分化进行了计算建模,以及涉及的转录调节因子和基质-免疫通讯轴。
免疫细胞类型在健康滑膜中广泛存在,但在PTOA中经历了急剧的扩增和分化,最显著的是在巨噬细胞部分。我们确定了关节损伤后滑膜中巨噬细胞的几种极化状态,由不同的转录组特征支持,并部分受基质衍生的巨噬细胞集落刺激因子信号调节。转录因子Pu.1、Cebpα、Cebpβ和Jun被预测控制全身来源的单核细胞分化为促炎性滑膜巨噬细胞。
我们定义了健康和受伤小鼠滑膜中存在的不同滑膜巨噬细胞亚群。对PTOA中巨噬细胞亚型的不同功能、起源和疾病动力学进行细致的表征对于将这些高度通用的细胞作为治疗靶点至关重要。