During the implantation window, the endometrium becomes poised to transition to a pregnant state, a process driven by differentiation of stromal cells into decidual cells (DC). Perturbations in this process, termed decidualization, leads to breakdown of the feto-maternal interface and miscarriage, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we reconstructed the decidual pathway at single-cell level in vitro and demonstrate that stromal cells first mount an acute stress response before emerging as DC or senescent DC (snDC). In the absence of immune cell-mediated clearance of snDC, secondary senescence transforms DC into progesterone-resistant cells that abundantly express extracellular matrix remodelling factors. Additional single-cell analysis of midluteal endometrium identified DIO2 and SCARA5 as marker genes of a diverging decidual response in vivo. Finally, we report a conspicuous link between a pro-senescent decidual response in peri-implantation endometrium and recurrent pregnancy loss, suggesting that pre-pregnancy screening and intervention may reduce the burden of miscarriage.
SummaryThe fate of the human endometrium is determined during the mid-luteal window of implantation, coinciding with differentiation of endometrial stromal cells (EnSCs) into specialized decidual cells.In response to successful embryo implantation, differentiating EnSCs transform the endometrium into a decidua that maintains the placenta throughout gestation; whereas falling progesterone levels in the absence of pregnancy lead to tissue destruction and menstrual shedding. We used single-cell
Antifreeze
proteins from polar fish species are potent ice recrystallization
inhibitors (IRIs) effectively stopping all ice growth. Additives that
have IRI activity have been shown to enhance cellular cryopreservation
with potential to improve the distribution of donor cells and tissue.
Polyampholytes, polymers with both anionic and cationic side chains,
are a rapidly emerging class of polymer cryoprotectants, but their
mode of action and the structural features essential for activity
are not clear. Here regioregular polyampholytes are synthesized from
maleic anhydride copolymers to enable stoichiometric installation
of the charged groups, ensuring regioregularity, which is not possible
using conventional random copolymerization. A modular synthetic strategy
is employed to enable the backbone and side chain hydrophobicity to
be varied, with side chain hydrophobicity found to have a profound
effect on the IRI activity. The activity of the regioregular polymers
was found to be superior to those derived from a standard random copolymerization
with statistical incorporation of monomers, demonstrating that sequence
composition is crucial to the activity of IRI active polyampholytes.
Because
of the emergence of antimicrobial resistance to traditional
small-molecule drugs, cationic antimicrobial polymers are appealing
targets. Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a particular
problem, with multi- and total drug resistance spreading and more
than a billion latent infections globally. This study reports nanoparticles
bearing variable densities of poly(dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate)
and the unexpected and distinct mechanisms of action this multivalent
presentation imparts against Escherichia coli versus Mycobacterium smegmatis (model of M. tuberculosis), leading to killing or growth inhibition, respectively. A convergent
“grafting to” synthetic strategy was used to assemble
a 50-member nanoparticle library, and using a high-throughput screen
identified that only the smallest (2 nm) particles were stable in
both saline and complex cell media. Compared with the linear polymers,
the nanoparticles displayed two- and eight-fold enhancements in antimicrobial
activity against M. smegmatis and E. coli, respectively. Mechanistic studies demonstrated that the antimicrobial
particles were bactericidal against E. coli due to
rapid disruption of the cell membranes. Conversely, against M. smegmatis the particles did not lyse the cell membrane
but rather had a bacteriostatic effect. These results demonstrate
that to develop new polymeric antituberculars the widely assumed,
broad spectrum, membrane-disrupting mechanism of polycations must
be re-evaluated. It is clear that synthetic nanomaterials can engage
in more complex interactions with mycobacteria, which we hypothesize
is due to the unique cell envelope at the surface of these bacteria.
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