Skip to main content

Osteomyelitis is associated with increased anti-inflammatory response and immune exhaustion.

Frontiers in immunology

Authors: Jayagopi Surendar, Roslind K Hackenberg, Fabio Schmitt-Sánchez, Robert Ossendorff, Kristian Welle, Birgit Stoffel-Wagner, Peter T Sage, Christof Burger, Dieter C Wirtz, Andreas C Strauss, Frank A Schildberg

INTRODUCTION: Osteomyelitis (OMS) is a bone infection causing bone pain and severe complications. A balanced immune response is critical to eradicate infection without harming the host, yet pathogens manipulate immunity to establish a chronic infection. Understanding OMS-driven inflammation is essential for disease management, but comprehensive data on immune profiles and immune cell activation during OMS are lacking.

METHODS: Using high-dimensional flow cytometry, we investigated the detailed innate and adaptive systemic immune cell populations in OMS and age- and sex-matched controls.

RESULTS: Our study revealed that OMS is associated with increased levels of immune regulatory cells, namely T regulatory cells, B regulatory cells, and T follicular regulatory cells. In addition, the expression of immune activation markers HLA-DR and CD86 was decreased in OMS, while the expression of immune exhaustion markers TIM-3, PD-1, PD-L1, and VISTA was increased. Members of the T follicular helper (Tfh) cell family as well as classical and typical memory B cells were significantly increased in OMS individuals. We also found a strong correlation between memory B cells and Tfh cells.

DISCUSSION: We conclude that OMS skews the host immune system towards the immunomodulatory arm and that the Tfh memory B cell axis is evident in OMS. Therefore, immune-directed therapies may be a promising alternative for eradication and recurrence of infection in OMS, particularly in individuals and areas where antibiotic resistance is a major concern.

Copyright © 2024 Surendar, Hackenberg, Schmitt-Sánchez, Ossendorff, Welle, Stoffel-Wagner, Sage, Burger, Wirtz, Strauss and Schildberg.

PMID: 38736874

Participating cluster members