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Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration

There is increasing evidence that T lymphocytes play a key role in controlling endogenous regeneration. Regeneration appears to be impaired in case of local accumulation of CD8+ effector T cells (T(EFF)), impairing endogenous regeneration by increasing a primary “useful” inflammation toward a damagi...

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Autores principales: Schlundt, Claudia, Reinke, Simon, Geissler, Sven, Bucher, Christian H., Giannini, Carolin, Märdian, Sven, Dahne, Michael, Kleber, Christian, Samans, Björn, Baron, Udo, Duda, Georg N., Volk, Hans-Dieter, Schmidt-Bleek, Katharina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6706871/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31475013
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01954
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author Schlundt, Claudia
Reinke, Simon
Geissler, Sven
Bucher, Christian H.
Giannini, Carolin
Märdian, Sven
Dahne, Michael
Kleber, Christian
Samans, Björn
Baron, Udo
Duda, Georg N.
Volk, Hans-Dieter
Schmidt-Bleek, Katharina
author_facet Schlundt, Claudia
Reinke, Simon
Geissler, Sven
Bucher, Christian H.
Giannini, Carolin
Märdian, Sven
Dahne, Michael
Kleber, Christian
Samans, Björn
Baron, Udo
Duda, Georg N.
Volk, Hans-Dieter
Schmidt-Bleek, Katharina
author_sort Schlundt, Claudia
collection PubMed
description There is increasing evidence that T lymphocytes play a key role in controlling endogenous regeneration. Regeneration appears to be impaired in case of local accumulation of CD8+ effector T cells (T(EFF)), impairing endogenous regeneration by increasing a primary “useful” inflammation toward a damaging level. Thus, rescuing regeneration by regulating the heightened pro-inflammatory reaction employing regulatory CD4+ T (T(Reg)) cells could represent an immunomodulatory option to enhance healing. Hypothesis was that CD4+ T(Reg) might counteract undesired effects of CD8+ T(EFF). Using adoptive T(Reg) transfer, bone healing was consistently improved in mice possessing an inexperienced immune system with low amounts of CD8+ T(EFF). In contrast, mice with an experienced immune system (high amounts of CD8+ T(EFF)) showed heterogeneous bone repair with regeneration being dependent upon the individual T(EFF)/T(Reg) ratio. Thus, the healing outcome can only be improved by an adoptive T(Reg) therapy, if an unfavorable T(EFF)/T(Reg) ratio can be reshaped; if the individual CD8+ T(EFF) percentage, which is dependent on the individual immune experience can be changed toward a favorable ratio by the T(Reg) transfer. Remarkably, also in patients with impaired fracture healing the T(EFF)/T(Reg) ratio was higher compared to uneventful healers, validating our finding in the mouse osteotomy model. Our data demonstrate for the first time the key-role of a balanced T(EFF)/T(Reg) response following injury needed to reach successful regeneration using bone as a model system. Considering this strategy, novel opportunities for immunotherapy in patients, which are at risk for impaired healing by targeting T(EFF) cells and supporting T(Reg) cells to enhance healing are possible.
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spelling pubmed-67068712019-08-30 Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration Schlundt, Claudia Reinke, Simon Geissler, Sven Bucher, Christian H. Giannini, Carolin Märdian, Sven Dahne, Michael Kleber, Christian Samans, Björn Baron, Udo Duda, Georg N. Volk, Hans-Dieter Schmidt-Bleek, Katharina Front Immunol Immunology There is increasing evidence that T lymphocytes play a key role in controlling endogenous regeneration. Regeneration appears to be impaired in case of local accumulation of CD8+ effector T cells (T(EFF)), impairing endogenous regeneration by increasing a primary “useful” inflammation toward a damaging level. Thus, rescuing regeneration by regulating the heightened pro-inflammatory reaction employing regulatory CD4+ T (T(Reg)) cells could represent an immunomodulatory option to enhance healing. Hypothesis was that CD4+ T(Reg) might counteract undesired effects of CD8+ T(EFF). Using adoptive T(Reg) transfer, bone healing was consistently improved in mice possessing an inexperienced immune system with low amounts of CD8+ T(EFF). In contrast, mice with an experienced immune system (high amounts of CD8+ T(EFF)) showed heterogeneous bone repair with regeneration being dependent upon the individual T(EFF)/T(Reg) ratio. Thus, the healing outcome can only be improved by an adoptive T(Reg) therapy, if an unfavorable T(EFF)/T(Reg) ratio can be reshaped; if the individual CD8+ T(EFF) percentage, which is dependent on the individual immune experience can be changed toward a favorable ratio by the T(Reg) transfer. Remarkably, also in patients with impaired fracture healing the T(EFF)/T(Reg) ratio was higher compared to uneventful healers, validating our finding in the mouse osteotomy model. Our data demonstrate for the first time the key-role of a balanced T(EFF)/T(Reg) response following injury needed to reach successful regeneration using bone as a model system. Considering this strategy, novel opportunities for immunotherapy in patients, which are at risk for impaired healing by targeting T(EFF) cells and supporting T(Reg) cells to enhance healing are possible. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6706871/ /pubmed/31475013 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01954 Text en Copyright © 2019 Schlundt, Reinke, Geissler, Bucher, Giannini, Märdian, Dahne, Kleber, Samans, Baron, Duda, Volk and Schmidt-Bleek. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Schlundt, Claudia
Reinke, Simon
Geissler, Sven
Bucher, Christian H.
Giannini, Carolin
Märdian, Sven
Dahne, Michael
Kleber, Christian
Samans, Björn
Baron, Udo
Duda, Georg N.
Volk, Hans-Dieter
Schmidt-Bleek, Katharina
Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration
title Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration
title_full Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration
title_fullStr Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration
title_full_unstemmed Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration
title_short Individual Effector/Regulator T Cell Ratios Impact Bone Regeneration
title_sort individual effector/regulator t cell ratios impact bone regeneration
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6706871/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31475013
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2019.01954
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