The role of bacterial stimuli in inflammation-driven bone formation

Publication date

2019-05-16

Authors

Croes, Michiel
Kruijt, MoyoORCID 0000-0002-5983-5251ISNI 0000000387798520
Boot, Willemijn
Pouran, B.
Braham, Maaike V.J.
Pakpahan, S. A.
Weinans, HarrieORCID 0000-0002-2275-6170ISNI 0000000393288658
Vogely, H CharlesISNI 0000000391177794
Fluit, Ad C.ISNI 0000000390114572
Dhert, W. J.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

Abstract

Immune cells and their soluble factors regulate skeletal cells during normal bone regeneration and pathological bone formation. Bacterial infections can trigger immune responses that activate pro-osteogenic pathways, but these are usually overshadowed by osteolysis and concerns of systemic inflammation. The aim of this study was to determine whether the transient local inflammatory reaction to non-viable bacterial immune agonists could lead to favourable new bone formation. In a series of rabbit studies, as proof-of-concept, it was determined how tibial intramedullary injection of viable or killed bacterial species affected bone remodelling and new bone formation. Application of killed bacteria led to considerable new bone formation after 4 weeks, without the prolonged systemic inflammation and exaggerated bone lysis seen with active infection. The osteo-immunomodulatory effects of various species of killed bacteria and the dose response relationship were subsequently screened in ectopically-implanted ceramic scaffolds. Histomorphometry after 8 weeks showed that a relatively low dose of killed bacteria enhanced ectopic bone induction. Moreover, lipoteichoic acid – the bacterial cell-wall derived toll-like-receptor (TLR)-2 activator – was identified as an osteo-stimulatory factor. Collectively, the data indicated that bacterial stimuli could be harnessed to stimulate osteogenesis, which occurs through a synergy with osteoinductive signals. This finding holds promise for the use of nonviable bacteria, bacterial antigens, or their simplified analogues as immuno-modulatory bone regenerating tools in bone biomaterials.

Keywords

BMPs/TGF-beta, osteoblasts, osteoimmunology, osteomyelitis, stromal/stem cells, toll-like-receptors., Bioengineering, Biochemistry, Biomaterials, Biomedical Engineering, Cell Biology

Citation

Croes, M, Kruyt, M C, Boot, W, Pouran, B, Braham, M V, Pakpahan, S A, Weinans, H, Vogely, H C, Fluit, A C, Dhert, W J, Alblas, J & Öner, F C 2019, 'The role of bacterial stimuli in inflammation-driven bone formation', European Cells & Materials, vol. 37, pp. 402-419. https://doi.org/10.22203/eCM.v037a24