Decoding the endometrial niche of Asherman’s Syndrome at single-cell resolution

Asherman’s Syndrome is characterized by intrauterine adhesions or scarring, which cause infertility, menstrual abnormalities, and recurrent pregnancy loss. The pathophysiology of this syndrome remains unknown, with treatment restricted to recurrent surgical removal of intrauterine scarring, which ha...

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Veröffentlicht in:NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 2023-09, Vol.14 (1), p.5890-5890, Article 5890
Hauptverfasser: Santamaria, Xavier, Roson, Beatriz, Perez-Moraga, Raul, Venkatesan, Nandakumar, Pardo-Figuerez, Maria, Gonzalez-Fernandez, Javier, Llera-Oyola, Jaime, Fernández, Estefania, Moreno, Inmaculada, Salumets, Andres, Vankelecom, Hugo, Vilella, Felipe, Simon, Carlos
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Asherman’s Syndrome is characterized by intrauterine adhesions or scarring, which cause infertility, menstrual abnormalities, and recurrent pregnancy loss. The pathophysiology of this syndrome remains unknown, with treatment restricted to recurrent surgical removal of intrauterine scarring, which has limited success. Here, we decode the Asherman’s Syndrome endometrial cell niche by analyzing data from over 200,000 cells with single-cell RNA-sequencing in patients with this condition and through in vitro analyses of Asherman’s Syndrome patient-derived endometrial organoids. Our endometrial atlas highlights the loss of the endometrial epithelium, alterations to epithelial differentiation signaling pathways such as Wnt and Notch, and the appearance of characteristic epithelium expressing secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor during the window of implantation. We describe syndrome-associated alterations in cell-to-cell communication and gene expression profiles that support a dysfunctional pro-fibrotic, pro-inflammatory, and anti-angiogenic environment. Asherman’s Syndrome is characterized by intrauterine scarring and infertility. Here, the authors decode the Asherman’s Syndrome endometrial cell niche by single-cell RNA sequencing and in vitro analyses of patient-derived endometrial organoids.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-41656-1