Immunosuppressive cell and cytokine response linked to bone nonunion
University of Oregon scientist says levels of myeloid-derived suppressor cells and immunosuppressive cytokine IL-10 could be early predictors of treatment response in trauma cases
2021-02-18
(Press-News.org) EUGENE, Ore. -- Feb. 18, 2021 -- An abnormal suppression of the immune system linked to the onset of numerous diseases has been associated with poor functional regeneration of traumatic bone injuries.
Levels of immune cells and proteins circulating in the blood following traumatic injury combined with advanced data analytics could predict whether patients are likely to respond to treatment, said Robert Guldberg, executive director of the Phil and Penny Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact.
The project -- detailed in a paper published online ahead of print in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences -- identified myeloid-derived suppressor cells and the immunosuppressive cytokine IL-10 as the strongest predictors of delayed and less effective bone-healing.
That association emerged after a series of experiments in which Guldberg's team ran thousands of data models on hundreds of biomarkers.
Guldberg was the principal investigator on the research, which was supported by the U.S. Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine and done with colleagues at Georgia Tech and Evolved Analytics.
"Our studies showed that myeloid-derived suppressor cells were consistently elevated in the blood as well as the local tissue in the non-responders to treatment, suggesting that suppression of the immune system may negatively affect musculoskeletal healing," Guldberg said. "That opens up potential novel therapeutic targets to improve patient outcomes following traumatic injuries."
Although standard bone fractures heal 95 percent of the time, complex fractures or trauma that cause damage to bones and surrounding soft tissues such as muscle have higher rates of complications and often require multiple procedures to heal. These non-healing bones are referred to as being in nonunion.
Factors such as age or underlying conditions, Guldberg said, can increase the risk of complications, motivating the need for biomarkers that can predict patient outcomes.
"We were quite intrigued to identify biomarkers that could be measured from the blood that correlated with local healing," he said. "The observation that was most exciting though was that immunosuppressive biomarkers were elevated as early as one week after treatment, well before radiographs could be used to assess the progress of healing."
A similar dysregulated immune response is seen in early stages of infections, cancer and other diseases. Myeloid-derived suppressor cells normally activate along with other cell groups that respond to injury or a pathological condition. In turn, various proteins, such as the cytokines identified in the new paper, activate to control inflammation. Under normal conditions following injury, these compensatory responses return to normal levels.
When that compensation fails to occur, Guldberg said, patients can enter a state of chronic inflammation and sustained immune suppression that appear to be associated with poor treatment outcomes.
Under a recently awarded 2.5 million, five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health, Guldberg will lead a team to further characterize and confirm the immune biomarkers in anticipation of a possible human clinical trial and test a new immunomodulation treatment strategy.
INFORMATION:
Co-authors with Guldberg on the PNAS paper were Georgia Tech doctoral students Albert Cheng and Casey E. Vantucci, the study's lead authors, former Georgia Tech doctoral student Marissa A. Ruehle and Georgia Tech researchers Laxminarayanan Krishnan, Levi B. Wood and Krishnendu Roy, and Theresa Kotanchek of Evolved Analytics.
Links
Phil and Penny Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact: https://accelerate.uoregon.edu/
About Robert Guldberg: https://accelerate.uoregon.edu/robert-guldberg
Guldberg Lab: https://guldberg.uoregon.edu/
NIH grant Immunoengineering Strategies for Musculoskeletal Trauma: https://reporter.nih.gov/search/3N98srihc0aNp3vymzsUiw/project-details/9974169
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2021-02-18
WASHINGTON--A potentially dangerous side effect of testosterone therapy for transgender men is an increase in red blood cells that can raise the risk of blood clots, heart attack or stroke, according to a new study published in the Endocrine Society's Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.
Gender diverse people make up an estimated 0.6% of the U.S. population and are defined as having gender identity that is not aligned with their sex recorded at birth. Transgender men often undergo testosterone therapy as part of their gender-affirming treatment. Erythrocytosis, a condition where your body makes too many red blood cells, is a common side effect of testosterone therapy that can increase the risk of blood clots, heart attack or stroke.
"Erythrocytosis is common ...
2021-02-18
Despite being one of the world's most charismatic species, tigers face uncertain futures primarily due to habitat fragmentation, human-wildlife conflict and poaching. As global tiger populations decline, so does their genetic diversity. But until now it's been unclear how the animals' dwindling numbers are affecting them at the genetic level.
To find out, researchers at Stanford University, the National Centre for Biological Sciences, India, and various zoological parks and NGOs sequenced 65 genomes from four of the surviving tiger subspecies. Their findings confirmed that strong genetic differences exist between different tiger subspecies but showed, surprisingly, that these differences emerged relatively recently, ...
2021-02-18
Transit-oriented development--which concentrates high-density housing, commercial activities and public spaces around a rapid transit station--can both be a boon and a bane for communities, suggests a new UBC study.
"Transit-oriented development (TOD) can reduce traffic congestion and air pollution, encourage active mobility, and revitalize a neighbourhood," explains study author Craig E. Jones, a PhD candidate in geography and the research coordinator for the Housing Research Collaborative at UBC's faculty of applied science.
"However, it can also cause gentrification through the demolition of affordable rental housing. It can tailor the area towards condo ...
2021-02-18
PHOENIX, Ariz. and DUARTE, Calif. -- Feb. 17, 2021 -- Urinalysis has long been a staple of physical exams to detect and manage a number of diseases and disorders, but not cancer. What if it were that easy, though, and cancer was detected in its very earliest stages when the disease responds more favorably to treatment and improved outcomes are more likely?
That was the question posed by scientists at the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), an affiliate of City of Hope, who have found a way of zeroing in on early-stage cancer by analyzing short strands of cell-free DNA in urine. Their study's findings were published today in the scientific journal Science ...
2021-02-18
Severe forms of malaria such as Plasmodium falciparum may be deadly even after treatment with current parasite-killing drugs. This is due to persistent cyto-adhesion of infected erythrocytes even though existing parasites within the red blood cells are dead. As vaccines for malaria have proved less than moderately effective, and to treat these severe cases of P. falciparum malaria, new avenues are urgently needed. Latest estimates indicate that more than 500 million cases of malaria and more than 400,000 deaths are reported worldwide each year. Anti-adhesion drugs may hold the key to significantly improving survival rates.
Using venom from the Conus nux, a species of sea snail, a first-of-its-kind study ...
2021-02-18
Extending the symptoms that trigger a PCR test for COVID-19 could help detect around a third more cases of the disease.
New research led by researchers at King's College London and published in the Journal of Infection suggests that restricting testing to the 'classic triad' of cough, fever and loss of smell which is required for eligibility for a PCR test through the NHS may have missed cases. Extending the list to include fatigue, sore throat, headache and diarrhoea would have detected 96% of symptomatic cases.
A team of researchers at King's College London and the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) analysed data from more than 122,000 UK adult users of the ZOE COVID Symptom Study app. These users reported experiencing ...
2021-02-18
A research team from the Institut national de la recherche scientifique (INRS) has improved the protective effect of a molecule against ischemic stroke, which is caused by an interruption of blood flow to the brain. The results of the study, conducted in collaboration with a Spanish team, were published in the Communications Biology of Nature Research journal.
Every year in Quebec, about 20,000 people have a stroke. Also known as a "cerebral infarction", this sudden neurological deficit can lead to psychological and physical after-effects. These effects result from an increase in glutamate in the brain, which destroys neurons. "Glutamate is an essential neurotransmitter for neuronal communication, learning and memory ...
2021-02-18
BURNABY, BC - (February 18, 2021) -- D-Wave Systems Inc., the leader in quantum computing systems, software, and services, today published a milestone study in collaboration with scientists at Google, demonstrating a computational performance advantage, increasing with both simulation size and problem hardness, to over 3 million times that of corresponding classical methods. Notably, this work was achieved on a practical application with real-world implications, simulating the topological phenomena behind the 2016 Nobel Prize in Physics. This performance advantage, exhibited in a complex quantum simulation of materials, is a meaningful step in the journey toward applications advantage in quantum computing.
The work by scientists at D-Wave ...
2021-02-18
Ice is a very versatile material. In snowflakes or ice cubes, the oxygen atoms are arranged hexagonally. This ice form is called ice one (ice I). "Strictly speaking, however, these are not actually perfect crystals, but disordered systems in which the water molecules are randomly oriented in different spatial directions," explains Thomas Loerting from the Institute of Physical Chemistry at the University of Innsbruck, Austria. Including ice I, 18 crystalline forms of ice were known so far, which differ in the arrangement of their atoms. The different types of ice, known as polymorphs, form depending on pressure and temperature and have very different properties. For example, their melting points differ by several ...
2021-02-18
DALLAS - Feb. 18, 2021 - Inhalation of depleted uranium from exploding munitions did not lead to Gulf War illness (GWI) in veterans deployed in the 1991 Persian Gulf War, a new study co-authored by a leading researcher of the disease at UT Southwestern suggests. The findings, published today in Scientific Reports, help eliminate a long-suspected cause of GWI that has attracted international concern for three decades.
Using high-precision multicollector mass spectrometry for the first time in such a study, END ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Immunosuppressive cell and cytokine response linked to bone nonunion
University of Oregon scientist says levels of myeloid-derived suppressor cells and immunosuppressive cytokine IL-10 could be early predictors of treatment response in trauma cases