| Literature DB >> 34948349 |
Naveena B Janakiram1,2,3, Michael S Valerio1,2,3, Stephen M Goldman1,2,3, Christopher L Dearth1,2,3.
Abstract
Composite tissue injuries (CTI) are common among US Military Service members during combat operations, and carry a high potential of morbidity. Furthermore, CTI are often complicated due to an altered wound healing response, resulting in part from a dysregulation of the innate and adaptive immune responses. Unlike normal wound healing, in CTI, disruptions occur in innate immune responses, altering neutrophil functions, macrophage activation and polarization, further impacting the functions of T regulatory cells. Additionally, the biological underpinnings of these unfavorable wound healing conditions are multifactorial, including various processes, such as: ischemia, hypoxia, low nutrient levels, and altered cell metabolic pathways, among others, all of which are thought to trigger anergy in immune cells and destabilize adaptive immune responses. As a result, impaired wound healing is common in CTI. Herein, we review the altered innate and adaptive immune cells and their metabolic status and responses following CTI, and discuss the role a multi-pronged immunomodulatory approach may play in facilitating improved outcomes for afflicted patients.Entities:
Keywords: composite musculoskeletal trauma; immunomodulation; inflammation; military medicine; tissue regeneration; wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34948349 PMCID: PMC8705789 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222413552
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Composite tissue injuries involves multiple immune cells and endogenous immune pathways. Tissue-resident macrophages release chemoattractants triggering neutrophil infiltration and the simultaneous activation of complement pathway molecules in vessels. These events result in increased pro-inflammatory conditions with an increased number of M1-like macrophages. Pro-inflammatory arachidonic acid pathway metabolites, PGE2 and leukotrienes along with pro-inflammatory cytokines result in initiating precursor cells in various damaged tissues. An increase in Th2 immune response is established with an increase in IL10, IL4, and IL3, etc., which propagates M2 macrophages and Tregs that help in inducing cell differentiation and wound healing. A sustained pro-inflammatory reaction for a longer duration than needed results in a chronic wound or delayed wound closure.
Figure 2Dysregulation of innate immune responses following CTI: (1) blast-induced trauma in extremities damages multiple tissues, leading to hematoma. (2) Hematoma triggers neutrophil extravasation from the vasculature to the wound site. (3) A robust increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines triggers neutrophils to clear the debris of dead cells. (4) Increased pro-inflammatory chemokines/interleukins induces the release of immature neutrophils, exacerbating the pro-inflammatory conditions. (5) An increase in immature neutrophils induces ischemia through the secretion of chemokines and proteases at the wound site. (6) Increased neutrophil infiltration further causes the upregulation of interleukins, chemokines and reactive oxygen species. (7) Monocytes and macrophages are activated to allow the transition from the acute inflammatory phase to the resolution phase. (8) Activated macrophages induce TGF-β. (9) Netosis of neutrophils induces robust pro-inflammatory responses, leading to excessive tissue damage. (10) Aberrant immune responses restrict the transition to adaptive immune responses. (11) Macrophages secrete arginase 1, thus inducing anergy in T cells. (12) These altered inflammatory responses maintain the presence of triggers for chronic inflammation, thus delaying the wound healing in CTI. Dotted arrows indicate the secondary induction of immune cells/cytokines, which inhibit normal healing responses by exacerbating pro-inflammatory responses. See text for further details.
CTI induced alterations in neutrophils and their functional consequences.
| Trauma Induced Changes in Neutrophils | Functional Consequences |
|---|---|
| Expression of CD88 | Generation of superoxide anions and release of granule enzymes-helps in adhesion to endothelial cells. |
| Engulfment of IL-8 chemokine receptor (CXCR)1 and CXCR2, FcγRIII (CD16), and complement receptor C5aR1 | Impairment of targeted chemotaxis causing inflammatory disorder |
| Active shedding of IL-6 receptor (IL-6R) | Amplify inflammatory effects |
| Uncontrolled release of IL-8 | Mobilizes immature, less deformable neutrophils |
| De-granulate and release free radicals, elastase, collagenase, and arachidonic acid | Trigger inflammatory response, aggravate ischemia and shut down local circulatory system |
| Increase anti-apoptotic genes | Increase circulation half-life of neutrophils |
| Increase in NETosis | Aggravate tissue damage |
| Increase in Low-density neutrophils (LDNs) | Suppress adaptive immune responses |
T regs display both pro and anti-inflammatory responses in CTI during initial phases/immediately after trauma.
| T regs in CTI | Functional Consequences |
|---|---|
| Increase in Tregs number and activity immediately after CTI | Undesirable suppression of pro-inflammatory Th-1 type cytokines delaying wound healing |
| Early phase increased expression of IL-10 | Suppression of pro-inflammatory responses (Th1 type and IFN-γ delaying wound healing |
| Presence of TGF-β and IL-6 convert Tregs to TH17 cells | Increase unrequired inflammatory responses |
| T regs suppress DC maturation | Inducing anergy in T cells |
| T regs loose regulatory function on neutrophils, and conventional T cell functions | Loss of transition of inflammatory phase to regenerative and repair phase |
| Absence of Tregs | Myogenic activity |
| Expression of amphiregulin by Tregs | Controls muscle-homeostatis |
| Loss of IL-33 in stimulated Tregs | Impaired tissue repair |
Figure 3Changes in the mTOR metabolic pathway due to stress created by CTI triggers anergy in T cells, delaying adaptive immune responses by supporting the induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines, leading to chronic inflammatory conditions and delay/inhibit wound healing.
Figure 4Stress-induced amino acid-sensitive pathway, GCN2 signaling is activated in CTI conditions at the very early stages, thus inducing Treg functions not necessary at that stage of wound healing, thus inhibiting/disrupting the natural course of the acute pro-inflammatory phase. Increased expression of Tregs at early stages delays wound healing through the GCN2 pathway.