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Publication : Macrophage TGF-β signaling is critical for wound healing with heterotopic ossification after trauma.

First Author  Patel NK Year  2022
Journal  JCI Insight Volume  7
Issue  20 PubMed ID  36099022
Mgi Jnum  J:332044 Mgi Id  MGI:7407681
Doi  10.1172/jci.insight.144925 Citation  Patel NK, et al. (2022) Macrophage TGF-beta signaling is critical for wound healing with heterotopic ossification after trauma. JCI Insight 7(20)
abstractText  Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) plays a central role in normal and aberrant wound healing, but the precise mechanism in the local environment remains elusive. Here, using a mouse model of aberrant wound healing resulting in heterotopic ossification (HO) after traumatic injury, we find autocrine TGF-beta1 signaling in macrophages, and not mesenchymal stem/progenitor cells, is critical in HO formation. In-depth single-cell transcriptomic and epigenomic analyses in combination with immunostaining of cells from the injury site demonstrated increased TGF-beta1 signaling in early infiltrating macrophages, with open chromatin regions in TGF-beta1-stimulated genes at binding sites specific for transcription factors of activated TGF-beta1 (SMAD2/3). Genetic deletion of TGF-beta1 receptor type 1 (Tgfbr1; Alk5), in macrophages, resulted in increased HO, with a trend toward decreased tendinous HO. To bypass the effect seen by altering the receptor, we administered a systemic treatment with TGF-beta1/3 ligand trap TGF-betaRII-Fc, which resulted in decreased HO formation and a delay in macrophage infiltration to the injury site. Overall, our data support the role of the TGF-beta1/ALK5 signaling pathway in HO.
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