Comprehensive transcriptional atlas of human adenomyosis deciphered by the integration of single-cell RNA-sequencing and spatial transcriptomics
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Tao Chen,
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Yiliang Xu,
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Xiaocui Xu,
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Jianzhang Wang,
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Zhiruo Qiu,
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Yayuan Yu,
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Xiaohong Jiang,
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Wanqi Shao,
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Dandan Bai,
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Mingzhu Wang,
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Shuyan Mei,
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Tao Cheng,
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Li Wu,
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Shaorong Gao,
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Xuan Che
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Abstract
Adenomyosis is a poorly understood gynecological disorder lacking effective treatments. Controversy persists regarding “invagination” and “metaplasia” theories. The endometrial-myometrial junction (EMJ) connects the endometrium and myometrium and is important for diagnosing and classifying adenomyosis, but its in-depth study is just beginning. Using single-cell RNA sequencing and spatial profiling, we mapped transcriptional alterations across eutopic endometrium, lesions, and EMJ. Within lesions, we identified unique epithelial (LGR5+) and invasive stromal (PKIB+) subpopulations, along with WFDC1+ progenitor cells, supporting a complex interplay between “invagination” and “metaplasia” theories of pathogenesis. Further, we observed endothelial cell heterogeneity and abnormal angiogenic signaling involving vascular endothelial growth factor and angiopoietin pathways. Cell-cell communication differed markedly between ectopic and eutopic endometrium, with aberrant signaling in lesions involving pleiotrophin, TWEAK, and WNT cascades. This study reveals unique stem cell-like and invasive cell subpopulations within adenomyosis lesions identified, dysfunctional signaling, and EMJ abnormalities critical to developing precise diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
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