Realistic illustration of macrophages forming neuron-like connections with muscle fibers, sending calcium pulses to accelerate repair.
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Immune cells send neuron-like signals to jump-start muscle repair

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Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center have found that certain macrophages, a type of immune cell, can form rapid, neuron-like connections with muscle fibers to speed healing. By delivering quick pulses of calcium into damaged muscle, these cells trigger repair-related activity within seconds. The findings, published online November 21, 2025, in Current Biology, could eventually inform new treatments for muscle injuries and degenerative conditions.

Muscle repair varies depending on the type of damage, from acute sports injuries to chronic conditions such as muscular dystrophy. A research team at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center has identified a shared mechanism that appears to enhance recovery across multiple forms of muscle damage.

The study, published online November 21, 2025, in Current Biology, was led by first author Gyanesh Tripathi, PhD, and corresponding author Michael Jankowski, PhD, who leads the Research Division in Cincinnati Children's Department of Anesthesia and serves as Associate Director of Basic Science Research for the Pediatric Pain Research Center.

The newly identified process centers on macrophages, an immune cell type best known for clearing bacteria, dead cells and other debris. According to Cincinnati Children's, the team found that specific infiltrating macrophages can form synaptic-like contacts with myofibers, the muscle cells that make up skeletal muscle tissue.

The discovery emerged from work originally aimed at easing post-surgical pain. Instead of a new pain-relief strategy, the researchers observed a surprisingly fast repair response.

In mouse models of two forms of muscle damage—acute incision and more severe injury, including disease-like damage—brief chemogenetic activation of macrophages with a designer compound prompted the cells to release calcium ions directly to nearby muscle fibers. Within about 10 to 30 seconds, the researchers recorded calcium transients and low-level electrical activity in the injured muscle, accompanied by subtle muscle twitches.

"This occurs in a very rapid fashion. You can activate the macrophage and make the muscle twitch subtly almost immediately," Jankowski said, according to materials from Cincinnati Children's. The study reports that the effect involves infiltrating macrophages that arrive after damage, rather than resident immune cells already in the tissue.

In mouse models mimicking muscular dystrophy–like muscle damage, the same type of macrophage-driven signaling helped organize immune cells at injury sites and triggered waves of activity in affected muscle fibers. After 10 days, mice receiving macrophage activation showed substantially more new muscle fibers than control animals, the authors reported.

"The biggest surprise about this was finding that a macrophage has a synaptic-like property that delivers an ion to a muscle fiber to facilitate its repair after an injury," Jankowski said in a statement released by Cincinnati Children's. "It's literally like the way a neuron works, and it's working in an extremely fast synaptic-like fashion to regulate repair."

Despite the accelerated healing response, the experiments did not reveal a corresponding reduction in acute pain. The researchers note that understanding why about 20% of children who undergo surgery continue to experience longer-term pain could be an important next step.

Future work will explore whether human macrophages display similar synaptic-like behavior and whether such cells could be used as delivery vehicles for additional therapeutic signals or materials. Co-authors on the study include Adam Dourson, PhD, Fabian Montecino-Morales, PhD, Jennifer Wayland, MS, Sahana Khanna, Megan Hofmann, Hima Bindu Durumutla, MS, Thirupugal Govindarajan, PhD, Luis Queme, MD, PhD, and Douglas Millay, PhD. The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Cincinnati Children's Hospital Research Foundation.

Watu wanasema nini

X users express excitement about macrophages forming neuron-like synaptic connections with muscle fibers to deliver rapid calcium pulses for repair within seconds, as discovered by Cincinnati Children's researchers. Reactions are positive, highlighting potential treatments for muscle injuries, dystrophies, and age-related loss, with some calling it a step toward superhuman healing. No negative or skeptical views found; posts include summaries, links to sources, and optimistic commentary from diverse accounts.

Makala yanayohusiana

Scientist electrically stimulating human immune cells in a lab to promote tissue repair, as reported in breakthrough research from Trinity College Dublin.
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Electrical stimulation reprograms human immune cells to spur repair

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Trinity College Dublin researchers report that electrically stimulating human macrophages shifted them toward an anti‑inflammatory, tissue‑repairing state in laboratory tests, pointing to potential therapies for injuries and inflammatory disease. The peer‑reviewed findings appear in Cell Reports Physical Science.

Researchers have discovered a cluster of sensory neurons that link the brain and heart, triggering an immune response crucial for recovery after a heart attack. This finding reveals a feedback loop involving the nervous and immune systems that could lead to new therapies. Experiments in mice showed that manipulating these neurons speeds up healing and reduces scarring.

Imeripotiwa na AI Imethibitishwa ukweli

A Texas A&M University team has developed a biodegradable microneedle patch that delivers interleukin‑4 directly to damaged heart tissue after a heart attack. In preclinical models, this targeted approach shifts immune cells into a healing mode and improves communication between heart muscle and blood vessel cells, while avoiding many of the side effects seen with systemic drug delivery.

Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have discovered that surviving neurons in the visual system can sprout new branches to rebuild connections with the brain after traumatic injury, restoring function without regenerating lost cells. The process, observed in mice, proved effective but slower in females, highlighting sex-based differences in recovery. This finding challenges long-held beliefs about neural regeneration and offers insights into human brain injury treatment.

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Researchers at KAIST have developed an injection that transforms immune cells within tumors into active cancer-killing agents, bypassing the need for complex lab procedures. The method uses lipid nanoparticles to deliver instructions directly to macrophages, enabling them to recognize and attack cancer cells while boosting broader immune responses. In animal tests, the approach significantly slowed tumor growth in melanoma models.

Researchers at Zhejiang University have developed a novel method to reprogram mast cells, typically involved in allergies, to deliver cancer-fighting viruses directly to tumors. This approach, detailed in a recent Cell journal study, enhances immune responses and shows promise in animal models. It paves the way for personalized cancer therapies.

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In the latest episode of the spiegel podcast 'smarter leben', sports scientist ingo froböse explains how trained muscles not only look vital but also unleash healing powers. He highlights the role of myokines, messenger substances from active muscles, that strengthen the body in various ways. The episode is one of the most listened to of the year.

 

 

 

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