Genetic vulnerability to Crohn’s disease reveals a spatially resolved epithelial restitution program

Author:

Nakata Toru123ORCID,Li Chenhao123ORCID,Mayassi Toufic123ORCID,Lin Helen12ORCID,Ghosh Koushik123ORCID,Segerstolpe Åsa3ORCID,Diamond Emma L.12ORCID,Herbst Paula12,Biancalani Tommaso4ORCID,Gaddam Shreya4,Parkar Saurabh4,Lu Ziqing4ORCID,Jaiswal Alok3ORCID,Li Bihua3,Creasey Elizabeth A.12ORCID,Lefkovith Ariel3ORCID,Daly Mark J.35ORCID,Graham Daniel B.123ORCID,Xavier Ramnik J.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Computational and Integrative Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.

2. Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.

3. Klarman Cell Observatory, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA.

4. Genentech, South San Francisco, CA 94080, USA.

5. Analytical and Translational Genetics Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.

Abstract

Effective tissue repair requires coordinated intercellular communication to sense damage, remodel the tissue, and restore function. Here, we dissected the healing response in the intestinal mucosa by mapping intercellular communication at single-cell resolution and integrating with spatial transcriptomics. We demonstrated that a risk variant for Crohn’s disease, hepatocyte growth factor activator (HGFAC) Arg 509 His (R509H), disrupted a damage-sensing pathway connecting the coagulation cascade to growth factors that drive the differentiation of wound-associated epithelial (WAE) cells and production of a localized retinoic acid (RA) gradient to promote fibroblast-mediated tissue remodeling. Specifically, we showed that HGFAC R509H was activated by thrombin protease activity but exhibited impaired proteolytic activation of the growth factor macrophage-stimulating protein (MSP). In Hgfac R509H mice, reduced MSP activation in response to wounding of the colon resulted in impaired WAE cell induction and delayed healing. Through integration of single-cell transcriptomics and spatial transcriptomics, we demonstrated that WAE cells generated RA in a spatially restricted region of the wound site and that mucosal fibroblasts responded to this signal by producing extracellular matrix and growth factors. We further dissected this WAE cell–fibroblast signaling circuit in vitro using a genetically tractable organoid coculture model. Collectively, these studies exploited a genetic perturbation associated with human disease to disrupt a fundamental biological process and then reconstructed a spatially resolved mechanistic model of tissue healing.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

General Medicine

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