Abstract
Recently, we could illustrate how tightly the bone and the immune system are interconnected during normal homeostasis but even stronger during bone regeneration. Specifically, the patient´s individual ratio of CD8+ effector T cells (TEFF, already identified as potential unfavorable cells for successful healing) to CD4+ regulatory T cells (TREG, one counterpart to CD8+ TEFF in controlling intratissue inflammation) prior to injury/ surgery appears to determine the healing outcome after fracture. We hypothesized that concentrating CD4+ TREG could serve as innovative therapeutic strategy to improve bone healing. We used an adoptive CD4+ TREG transfer in our well-established mouse osteotomy model. Before treatment, we identified the pre-surgery ratio of CD8+ TEFF/ CD4+ TREG by flow cytometry to characterize the healing potential of individual animals. Thereafter, we performed an adoptive CD4+ TREG transfer to reshape inflammation for supporting osteotomy healing. Across all groups, healing outcome was analyzed after 21 days post-surgery by µCT. Whereas TREG were highly supportive in SPF mice, we observed a heterogeneous clustered healing outcome in the non-SPF mice: TREG responder (improved healing outcome; p = 0.038) and TREG non-responder (impaired healing outcome; p = 0.024). Interestingly, the pre-/peri-surgery ratio of CD8+ TEFF/ CD4+ TREG was higher in the TREG non-responder (p=0.057). Thus, the amount of adoptively transferred CD4+ TREG was not sufficient to improve the healing outcome due to initial unfavorable high CD8+ TEFF/CD4+ TREG ratio. These results clearly show the importance of determining the individual immune status of each patient in the clinic before applying an immunotherapeutic approach.