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Modelling the impact of decidual senescence on embryo implantation in human endometrial assembloids.

Updated August 30, 2022

Decidual remodelling of midluteal endometrium leads to a short implantation window after which the uterine mucosa either breaks down or is transformed into a robust matrix that accommodates the placenta throughout pregnancy. To gain insights into the underlying mechanisms, we established and characterised endometrial assembloids, consisting of gland-like organoids and primary stromal cells. Single-cell transcriptomics revealed that decidualized assembloids closely resemble midluteal endometrium, harbouring differentiated and senescent subpopulations in both glands and stroma. We show that acute senescence in glandular epithelium drives secretion of multiple canonical implantation factors, whereas in the stroma it calibrates the emergence of anti-inflammatory decidual cells and pro-inflammatory senescent decidual cells. Pharmacological inhibition of stress responses in pre-decidual cells accelerated decidualization by eliminating the emergence of senescent decidual cells. In co-culture experiments, accelerated decidualization resulted in entrapment of collapsed human blastocysts in a robust, static decidual matrix. By contrast, the presence of senescent decidual cells created a dynamic implantation environment, enabling embryo expansion and attachment, although their persistence led to gradual disintegration of assembloids. Our findings suggest that decidual senescence controls endometrial fate decisions at implantation and highlight how endometrial assembloids may accelerate the discovery of new treatments to prevent reproductive failure.

Emma S LucasUniversity of Warwick, Coventry
Thomas M Rawlings1
Komal Makwana1
Deborah M Taylor2
Matteo A Molè3
Katherine J Fishwick1
Maria Tryfonos1
Joshua Odendaal1
Amelia Hawkes1
Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz4
Geraldine M Hartshorne1
Jan Joris Brosens1
Emma S Lucas1
1University of Warwick, Coventry
2Centre for Reproductive Medicine, University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust
3University of Cambridge, Cambridge
4Department of Physiology, Neuroscience and Development, University of Cambridge, Cambridgeshire
Ami Day

To reference this project, please use the following link:

https://explore.data.humancellatlas.org/projects/91af6e2f-65f2-44ec-98e0-ba4e98db22c8
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Analysis Portals

None

Project Label

GSE168405_OrganoidEndometrial

Species

Homo sapiens

Sample Type

organoids

Anatomical Entity

uterus

Organ Part

endometrium

Selected Cell Types

Unspecified

Model Organ

uterus

Disease Status (Specimen)

normal

Disease Status (Donor)

normal

Development Stage

human adult stage

Library Construction Method

Drop-seq

Nucleic Acid Source

single cell

Paired End

false

Analysis Protocol

analysis_protocol

File Format

3 file formats

Cell Count Estimate

Unspecified

Donor Count

3
csv.gz1 file(s)fastq.gz18 file(s)xlsx1 file(s)