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An estrogen-sensitive fibroblast population drives abdominal muscle fibrosis in an inguinal hernia mouse model
Tanvi Potluri, Matthew J. Taylor, Jonah J. Stulberg, Richard L. Lieber, Hong Zhao, Serdar E. Bulun
Tanvi Potluri, Matthew J. Taylor, Jonah J. Stulberg, Richard L. Lieber, Hong Zhao, Serdar E. Bulun
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Research Article Endocrinology Muscle biology

An estrogen-sensitive fibroblast population drives abdominal muscle fibrosis in an inguinal hernia mouse model

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Abstract

Greater than 25% of all men develop an inguinal hernia in their lifetime, and more than 20 million inguinal hernia repair surgeries are performed worldwide each year. The mechanisms causing abdominal muscle weakness, the formation of inguinal hernias, or their recurrence are largely unknown. We previously reported that excessively produced estrogen in the lower abdominal muscles (LAMs) triggers extensive LAM fibrosis, leading to hernia formation in a transgenic male mouse model expressing the human aromatase gene (Aromhum). To understand the cellular basis of estrogen-driven muscle fibrosis, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing on LAM tissue from Aromhum and wild-type littermates. We found a fibroblast-like cell group composed of 6 clusters, 2 of which were validated for their enrichment in Aromhum LAM tissue. One of the potentially novel hernia-associated fibroblast clusters in Aromhum was enriched for the estrogen receptor-α gene (Esr1hi). Esr1hi fibroblasts maximally expressed estrogen target genes and seemed to serve as the progenitors of another cluster expressing ECM-altering enzymes (Mmp3hi) and to upregulate expression of proinflammatory, profibrotic genes. The discovery of these 2 potentially novel and unique hernia-associated fibroblasts may lead to the development of novel treatments that can nonsurgically prevent or reverse inguinal hernias.

Authors

Tanvi Potluri, Matthew J. Taylor, Jonah J. Stulberg, Richard L. Lieber, Hong Zhao, Serdar E. Bulun

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Figure 3

Transcriptional differences in fibroblast-like cells of LAM tissue between WT and Aromhum mice.

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Transcriptional differences in fibroblast-like cells of LAM tissue betwe...
(A) Heatmap of WT versus Aromhum mice for the fibroblast-like group of cells. The top 20 upregulated and top 20 downregulated genes for Aromhum mice are shown. (B) MetaCore analysis for process networks and Gene Ontology processes enriched in both WT and Aromhum fibroblast-like cells represented by –log(P value). (C) Feature plots of profibrotic genes Timp1, Spon2, Postn, and Cthrc1 shown on individual UMAP plots for WT and Aromhum mice. Color intensity corresponds to relative expression.

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