| Literature DB >> 33390590 |
Chuang Guo1, Pengfei Cai1, Liying Jin1, Qing Sha1, Qiaoni Yu1, Wen Zhang1, Chen Jiang1, Qian Liu1, Dandan Zong1, Kun Li1, Jingwen Fang1,2, Fangting Lu3, Yanshi Wang3, Daojing Li3, Jun Lin1, Lu Li1, Zhutian Zeng1, Xianhong Tong3, Haiming Wei1, Kun Qu4,5,6.
Abstract
Maintaining homeostasis of the decidual immune microenvironment at the maternal-fetal interface is essential for placentation and reproductive success. Although distinct decidual immune cell subpopulations have been identified under normal conditions, systematic understanding of the spectrum and heterogeneity of leukocytes under recurrent miscarriage in human deciduas remains unclear. To address this, we profiled the respective transcriptomes of 18,646 primary human decidual immune cells isolated from patients with recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) and healthy controls at single-cell resolution. We discovered dramatic differential distributions of immune cell subsets in RPL patients compared with the normal decidual immune microenvironment. Furthermore, we found a subset of decidual natural killer (NK) cells that support embryo growth were diminished in proportion due to abnormal NK cell development in RPL patients. We also elucidated the altered cellular interactions between the decidual immune cell subsets in the microenvironment and those of the immune cells with stromal cells and extravillous trophoblast under disease state. These results provided deeper insights into the RPL decidual immune microenvironment disorder that are potentially applicable to improve the diagnosis and therapeutics of this disease.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33390590 DOI: 10.1038/s41421-020-00236-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Discov ISSN: 2056-5968 Impact factor: 10.849