Healthy Tendon Stem Cell-Derived Exosomes Promote Tendon-To-Bone Healing of Aged Chronic Rotator Cuff Tears by Breaking the Positive-Feedback Cross-Talk between Senescent Tendon Stem Cells and Macrophages through the Modulation of Macrophage Polarization

Small. 2024 Mar 8:e2311033. doi: 10.1002/smll.202311033. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The re-tear rate of rotator cuff tears (RCT) after surgical repair is high, especially in aged patients with chronic tears. Senescent tendon stem cells (s-TSCs) generally exist in aged and chronically torn rotator cuff tendons and are closely associated with impaired tendon-to-bone healing results. The present study found a positive feedback cross-talk between s-TSCs and macrophages. The conditioned medium (CM) from s-STCs can promote macrophage polarization mainly toward the M1 phenotype, whose CM reciprocally accelerated further s-TSC senescence. Additional healthy tendon stem-cells derived exosomes (h-TSC-Exos) can break this positive feedback cross-talk by skewing macrophage polarization from the M1 phenotype to the M2 phenotype, attenuating s-TSCs senescence. S-TSC senescence acceleration or attenuation effects induced by M1 or M2 macrophages are associated with the inhibition or activation of the bone morphogenetic protein 4 signaling pathway following RNA sequencing analysis. Using an aged-chronic rotator cuff tear rat model, it is found that h-TSC-Exos can shift the microenvironment in the tendon-to-bone interface from a pro-inflammatory to an anti-inflammatory type at the acute postoperative stage and improve the tendon-to-bone healing results, which are associated with the rejuvenated s-TSCs. Therefore, this study proposed a potential strategy to improve the healing of aged chronic RCT.

Keywords: healthy tendon stem cell-derived exosomes (h-TSC-Exos); macrophages; rotator cuff tears (RCT); senescence; tendon-to-bone healing.