Bone Research (Jul 2025)

Single-cell transcriptomic analysis identifies systemic immunosuppressive myeloid cells and local monocytes/macrophages as key regulators in polytrauma-induced immune dysregulation

  • Drishti Maniar,
  • M. Cole Keenum,
  • Casey E. Vantucci,
  • Tyler Guyer,
  • Paramita Chatterjee,
  • Kelly Leguineche,
  • Kaitlyn Cheung,
  • Robert E. Guldberg,
  • Krishnendu Roy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41413-025-00444-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Polytrauma with significant bone and volumetric muscle loss presents substantial clinical challenges. Although immune responses significantly influence fracture healing post-polytrauma, the cellular and molecular underpinnings of polytrauma-induced immune dysregulation require further investigation. While previous studies examined either injury site tissue or systemic tissue (peripheral blood), our study uniquely investigated both systemic and local immune cells at the same time to better understand polytrauma-induced immune dysregulation and associated impaired bone healing. Using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) in a rat polytrauma model, we analyzed blood, bone marrow, and the local defect soft tissue to identify potential cellular and molecular targets involved in immune dysregulation. We identified a trauma-associated immunosuppressive myeloid (TIM) cell population that drives systemic immune dysregulation, immunosuppression, and potentially impaired bone healing. We found CD1d as a global marker for TIM cells in polytrauma. In the local defect tissue, we observed Spp1 + monocytes/macrophages mediating inflammatory, fibrotic, and impaired adaptive immune responses. Finally, our findings highlighted increased signaling via Anxa1-Fpr2 and Spp1-Cd44 axes. This comprehensive analysis enhances our understanding of immune dysregulation-mediated nonunion following traumatic injury and provides biomarkers that could function as treatment targets.