Allometrically scaling tissue forces drive pathological foreign-body responses to implants via Rac2-activated myeloid cells

Author:

Padmanabhan JagannathORCID,Chen KellenORCID,Sivaraj DharshanORCID,Henn Dominic,Kuehlmann Britta A.,Kussie Hudson C.,Zhao Eric T.,Kahn AnumORCID,Bonham Clark A.,Dohi Teruyuki,Beck Thomas C.,Trotsyuk Artem A.,Stern-Buchbinder Zachary A.,Than Peter A.,Hosseini Hadi S.,Barrera Janos A.ORCID,Magbual Noah J.,Leeolou Melissa C.,Fischer Katharina S.,Tigchelaar Seth S.,Lin John Q.,Perrault David P.,Borrelli Mimi R.,Kwon Sun Hyung,Maan Zeshaan N.,Dunn James C. Y.ORCID,Nazerali Rahim,Januszyk Michael,Prantl Lukas,Gurtner Geoffrey C.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractSmall animals do not replicate the severity of the human foreign-body response (FBR) to implants. Here we show that the FBR can be driven by forces generated at the implant surface that, owing to allometric scaling, increase exponentially with body size. We found that the human FBR is mediated by immune-cell-specific RAC2 mechanotransduction signalling, independently of the chemistry and mechanical properties of the implant, and that a pathological FBR that is human-like at the molecular, cellular and tissue levels can be induced in mice via the application of human-tissue-scale forces through a vibrating silicone implant. FBRs to such elevated extrinsic forces in the mice were also mediated by the activation of Rac2 signalling in a subpopulation of mechanoresponsive myeloid cells, which could be substantially reduced via the pharmacological or genetic inhibition of Rac2. Our findings provide an explanation for the stark differences in FBRs observed in small animals and humans, and have implications for the design and safety of implantable devices.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Computer Science Applications,Biomedical Engineering,Medicine (miscellaneous),Bioengineering,Biotechnology

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