间质细胞
子宫内膜
生物
子宫内膜异位症
人口
干细胞
祖细胞
细胞
电池类型
间充质干细胞
再生(生物学)
细胞生物学
癌症研究
内科学
内分泌学
医学
遗传学
环境卫生
作者
Magda Marečková,Luz García‐Alonso,Marie Moullet,Valentina Lorenzi,Robert Petryszak,Carmen Sancho‐Serra,Ágnes Oszlánczi,Cecilia Mazzeo,Sophie Hoffman,Michał Krassowski,Kurtis Garbutt,Iva Kelava,Kezia Gaitskell,Slaveya Yancheva,Ee Von Woon,Victoria Male,Ingrid Granne,Karin Hellner,Krishnaa T. Mahbubani,Kourosh Saeb‐Parsy
标识
DOI:10.1101/2023.11.03.564728
摘要
Abstract The human endometrium, the inner lining of the uterus, exhibits complex, dynamic changes throughout the menstrual cycle in response to ovarian hormones. Aberrant response of endometrial cells to hormones is associated with multiple disorders, including endometriosis. Previous single-cell studies of the endometrium profiled a limited number of donors and lacked consensus in defining cell types and states. Here, we introduce the Human Endometrial Cell Atlas (HECA), a high-resolution single-cell reference atlas, combining published and newly generated single-cell transcriptomics datasets of endometrial biopsies of women with and without endometriosis. The HECA assigned consensus cell types and states, and uncovered novel ones, which we mapped in situ using spatial transcriptomics. We quantified how coordinated interactions between cell states in space and time contribute to endometrial regeneration and differentiation. In the continuously changing functionalis layer, we identified an intricate coordination of TGFβ signalling between stromal and epithelial cells, likely crucial for cell differentiation. In the basalis layer, we defined signalling between fibroblasts and a new epithelial cell population expressing epithelial stem/progenitor markers, suggesting their role in endometrial regeneration. Additionally, integrating the HECA single-cell data with genome-wide association study data and comparing endometrial samples from women with and without endometriosis, we pinpointed subsets of decidualised stromal cells and macrophages as the most dysregulated cell states in endometriosis. Overall, the HECA is an invaluable resource for studying endometrial physiology, investigating endometrial disorders, and guiding the creation of endometrial microphysiological in vitro systems.
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