期刊名称:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
印刷版ISSN:0027-8424
电子版ISSN:1091-6490
出版年度:2021
卷号:118
期号:41
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2110025118
语种:English
出版社:The National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
摘要:Significance
In the skin, tissue injury results in fibrosis in the form of a scar composed of dense extracellular matrix deposited by fibroblasts. Therapies that promote tissue regeneration rather than fibrosis remain elusive because principles of fibroblast programming and response to injury remain incompletely understood. Here, we present a multimodal -omics platform for the study of cell populations in complex tissue, which has allowed us to characterize wound healing fibroblasts across both time and space. We identify functionally distinct fibroblast subpopulations and track cell fate during the response to wounding. We demonstrate that populations of fibroblasts migrate, proliferate, and differentiate in an adaptive response to disruption of their environment. These results illustrate fundamental principles underlying the cellular response to tissue injury.
In the skin, tissue injury results in fibrosis in the form of scars composed of dense extracellular matrix deposited by fibroblasts. The therapeutic goal of regenerative wound healing has remained elusive, in part because principles of fibroblast programming and adaptive response to injury remain incompletely understood. Here, we present a multimodal -omics platform for the comprehensive study of cell populations in complex tissue, which has allowed us to characterize the cells involved in wound healing across both time and space. We employ a stented wound model that recapitulates human tissue repair kinetics and multiple Rainbow transgenic lines to precisely track fibroblast fate during the physiologic response to skin injury. Through integrated analysis of single cell chromatin landscapes and gene expression states, coupled with spatial transcriptomic profiling, we are able to impute fibroblast epigenomes with temporospatial resolution. This has allowed us to reveal potential mechanisms controlling fibroblast fate during migration, proliferation, and differentiation following skin injury, and thereby reexamine the canonical phases of wound healing. These findings have broad implications for the study of tissue repair in complex organ systems.