Reprogramming macrophages with R848-loaded artificial protocells to modulate skin and skeletal wound healing.
Paco López-CuevasTiah C L OatesQiao TongLucy M McGowanStephen J CrossCan XuYu ZhaoZhuping YinAshley Mark ToyeAsme BoussahelChrissy L HammondStephen MannPaul MartinPublished in: Journal of cell science (2024)
After tissue injury, inflammatory cells are rapidly recruited to the wound where they clear microbes and other debris, and coordinate the behaviour of other cell lineages at the repair site in both positive and negative ways. In this study, we take advantage of the translucency and genetic tractability of zebrafish to evaluate the feasibility of reprogramming innate immune cells in vivo with cargo-loaded protocells and investigate how this alters the inflammatory response in the context of skin and skeletal repair. Using live imaging, we show that protocells loaded with R848 cargo (which targets TLR7 and TLR8 signalling), are engulfed by macrophages resulting in their switching to a pro-inflammatory phenotype and altering their regulation of angiogenesis, collagen deposition and re-epithelialization during skin wound healing, as well as dampening osteoblast and osteoclast recruitment and bone mineralization during fracture repair. For infected skin wounds, R848-reprogrammed macrophages exhibited enhanced bactericidal activities leading to improved healing. We replicated our zebrafish studies in cultured human macrophages, and showed that R848-loaded protocells similarly reprogramme human cells, indicating how this strategy might be used to modulate wound inflammation in the clinic.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- inflammatory response
- immune response
- endothelial cells
- toll like receptor
- oxidative stress
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- single cell
- primary care
- drug delivery
- lps induced
- soft tissue
- bone loss
- mass spectrometry
- stem cells
- cell therapy
- cell death
- nuclear factor
- cell cycle arrest
- bone mineral density
- induced pluripotent stem cells