Division of Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility, University of Pennsylvania, Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Division of Neonatology, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Immunol. 2024 Mar 19;15:1364036. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2024.1364036. eCollection 2024.
Prior to pregnancy, hormonal changes lead to cellular adaptations in the endometrium allowing for embryo implantation. Critical for successful pregnancy establishment, innate immune cells constitute a significant proportion of uterine cells prior to arrival of the embryo and throughout the first trimester in humans and animal models. Abnormal uterine immune cell function during implantation is believed to play a role in multiple adverse pregnancy outcomes. Current work in humans has focused on uterine immune cells present after pregnancy establishment, and limited in vitro models exist to explore unique functions of these cells.
With single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNAseq), we comprehensively compared the human uterine immune landscape of the endometrium during the window of implantation and the decidua during the first trimester of pregnancy.
We uncovered global and cell-type-specific gene signatures for each timepoint. Immune cells in the endometrium prior to implantation expressed genes associated with immune metabolism, division, and activation. In contrast, we observed widespread interferon signaling during the first trimester of pregnancy. We also provide evidence of specific inflammatory pathways enriched in pre- and post-implantation macrophages and natural killer (NK) cells in the uterine lining. Using our novel implantation-on-a-chip (IOC) to model human implantation ex vivo, we demonstrate for the first time that uterine macrophages strongly promote invasion of extravillous trophoblasts (EVTs), a process essential for pregnancy establishment. Pre- and post-implantation uterine macrophages promoted EVT invasion to a similar degree as pre- and post-implantation NK cells on the IOC.
This work provides a foundation for further investigation of the individual roles of uterine immune cell subtypes present prior to embryo implantation and during early pregnancy, which will be critical for our understanding of pregnancy complications associated with abnormal trophoblast invasion and placentation.
怀孕前,激素变化导致子宫内膜中的细胞发生适应性改变,从而允许胚胎着床。在人类和动物模型中,固有免疫细胞在胚胎到达前和整个孕早期构成了子宫细胞的重要组成部分,对于成功妊娠的建立至关重要。着床期间子宫免疫细胞功能异常被认为在多种不良妊娠结局中起作用。目前人类的研究工作集中在妊娠建立后存在的子宫免疫细胞上,并且存在有限的体外模型来探索这些细胞的独特功能。
通过单细胞 RNA 测序(scRNAseq),我们全面比较了着床窗口期子宫内膜和孕早期蜕膜的人类子宫免疫景观。
我们揭示了每个时间点的全局和细胞类型特异性基因特征。着床前子宫内膜中的免疫细胞表达与免疫代谢、分裂和激活相关的基因。相比之下,我们在孕早期观察到广泛的干扰素信号。我们还提供了证据表明,在子宫衬里的植入前和植入后巨噬细胞和自然杀伤(NK)细胞中富集了特定的炎症途径。我们使用新颖的植入芯片(IOC)在体外模拟人类植入,首次证明了子宫巨噬细胞强烈促进了绒毛外滋养细胞(EVT)的侵袭,这是妊娠建立的关键过程。IOC 上的植入前和植入后巨噬细胞促进 EVT 侵袭的程度与植入前和植入后 NK 细胞相似。
这项工作为进一步研究胚胎植入前和孕早期存在的子宫免疫细胞亚群的个体作用奠定了基础,这对于我们理解与异常滋养细胞侵袭和胎盘形成相关的妊娠并发症至关重要。