64.10 Deficient Notch Signaling in Diabetic Wounds Decreases Tregs and Leads to Pathologic Inflammation

W. J. Melvin1, F. M. Davis1, C. O. Audu1, E. Barrett1, K. Mangum1, S. Wolf1, A. Joshi1, J. Shadiow1, S. B. Sharma1, R. Kai1, A. Obi1, B. B. Moore1, K. Gallagher1  1University Of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

Introduction: Non-healing wounds in patients with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) are a major cause of increasing morbidity and mortality. We and others have shown that a prolonged pro-inflammatory state is typical of pathologic diabetic wound healing. Regulatory T cells (Treg) are a subset of CD4+ cells that are known to be critical for physiologic wound healing and transitioning the wound microenvironment to a reparative state from an initial inflammatory state. Given that Notch signaling is known to regulate T cell phenotype in a context-dependent manner in other settings, we hypothesized that it regulates T cell phenotype in wound healing, and that decreased activation of Notch signaling in diabetic wounds leads to decreased Treg phenotype and subsequent pathologic inflammation.

Methods: Human single cell transcriptional profiling of diabetic wounds versus control wounds was obtained from amputated specimens (n=3/group) and analyzed for presence of Tregs. Next, using a murine wound healing model (4mm punch biopsy), wound T cell phenotypes were analyzed by flow cytometry from C57BL/6 diet-induced obese (DIO) mice (a model of T2D) at day 3, 5, and 7 post-wounding (n=5/group). Wound CD4+ T cells were isolated using magnetic cell sorting and analyzed for Notch signaling expression via quantitative PCR (qPCR). C57BL/6 mice with CD4+-specific deficiency in Notch signaling (DNMAML-CD4cre+) were wounded and compared to control (cre-) littermates (n=5/group) for wound healing via daily photo analysis and presence of Tregs via flow cytometry. Wound healing curves were analyzed using Image J software. Statistical significance was determined using Student’s t-test.

Results: Human single cell transcriptional profiling of diabetic wounds versus control wounds revealed decreased Tregs in diabetic wounds. Diabetic mice had less wound Tregs (CD4+CD25+FOXp3+) compared to nondiabetic control mice, and decreased expression of Notch target genes Hey1 and Hes1, indicating decreased Notch signaling. Similarly, DIO DNMAML-CD4cre+ had less wound Tregs compared to cre- littermate controls, and also impaired wound healing (Fig 1).

Conclusion: Tregs are decreased in diabetic wounds, driving persistent uncoordinated inflammation and pro-inflammatory phenotypes in other cell types. Notch signaling is decreased in diabetic wound T cells, decreasing Tregs and leading to impaired wound healing. Mice with T cell-specific Notch signaling deficiency also demonstrate decreased Treg formation and impaired wound healing. Thus Notch signaling may offer a potential therapeutic target to reduce pathologic inflammation in diabetic wounds.