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Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis
Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis
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Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis
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Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis
Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis

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Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis
Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis
Journal Article

Fat Phagocytosis Promotes Anti-Inflammatory Responses of Macrophages in a Mouse Model of Osteonecrosis

2024
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Overview
Osteonecrosis (ON) of the femoral head (ONFH) is a devastating bone disease affecting over 20 million people worldwide. ONFH is caused by a disruption of the blood supply, leading to necrotic cell death and increased inflammation. Macrophages are the key cells mediating the inflammatory responses in ON. It is unclear what the dynamic phenotypes of macrophages are and what mechanisms may affect macrophage polarization and, therefore, the healing process. In our preliminary study, we found that there is an invasion of macrophages into the repair tissue during ON healing. Interestingly, in both ONFH patients and a mouse ON model, fat was co-labeled within macrophages using immunofluorescence staining, indicating the phagocytosis of fat by macrophages. To study the effects of fat phagocytosis on the macrophage phenotype, we set up an in vitro macrophage and fat co-culture system. We found that fat phagocytosis significantly decreased M1 marker expression, such as IL1β and iNOS, in macrophages, whereas the expression of the M2 marker Arg1 was significantly increased with fat phagocytosis. To investigate whether the polarization change is indeed mediated by phagocytosis, we treated the cells with Latrunculin A (LA, which inhibits actin polymerization and phagocytosis). LA supplementation significantly reversed the polarization marker gene changes induced by fat phagocytosis. To provide an unbiased transcriptional gene analysis, we submitted the RNA for bulk RNA sequencing. Differential gene expression (DGE) analysis revealed that the top upregulated genes were related to anti-inflammatory responses, while proinflammatory genes were significantly downregulated. Additionally, using pathway enrichment and network analyses (Metascape), we confirmed that gene-enriched categories related to proinflammatory responses were significantly downregulated in macrophages with fat phagocytosis. Finally, we validated the similar macrophage phenotype changes in vivo. To summarize, we discovered that fat phagocytosis occurs in both ONFH patients and an ON mouse model, which inhibits proinflammatory responses with increased anabolic gene expression in macrophages. This fat-phagocytosis-induced macrophage phenotype is consistent with the in vivo changes shown in the ON mouse model. Our study reveals a novel phagocytosis-mediated macrophage polarization mechanism in ON, which fills in our knowledge gaps of macrophage functions and provides new concepts in macrophage immunomodulation as a promising treatment for ON.