Neuron-to-vessel signaling is a required feature of aberrant stem cell commitment after soft tissue trauma

Author:

Qin Qizhi,Gomez-Salazar Mario,Cherief Masnsen,Pagani Chase A.,Lee Seungyong,Hwang Charles,Tower Robert J.ORCID,Onggo Sharon,Sun Yuxiao,Piplani Abhinav,Li Zhao,Ramesh Sowmya,Clemens Thomas L.,Levi Benjamin,James Aaron W.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe functional interdependence of nerves and blood vessels is a well-established concept during tissue morphogenesis, yet the role of neurovascular coupling in proper and aberrant tissue repair is an emerging field of interest. Here, we sought to define the regulatory relationship of peripheral nerves on vasculature in a severe extremity trauma model in mice, which results in aberrant cell fate and heterotopic ossification (HO). First, a high spatial degree of neurovascular congruency was observed to exist within extremity injury associated heterotopic ossification. Vascular and perivascular cells demonstrate characteristic responses to injury, as assessed by single cell RNA sequencing. This vascular response to injury was blunted in neurectomized mice, including a decrease in endothelial proliferation and type H vessel formation, and a downregulation of key transcriptional networks associated with angiogenesis. Independent mechanisms to chemically or genetically inhibit axonal ingrowth led to similar deficits in HO site angiogenesis, a reduction in type H vessels, and heterotopic bone formation. Finally, a combination of single cell transcriptomic approaches within the dorsal root ganglia identified key neural-derived angiogenic paracrine factors that may mediate neuron-to-vascular signaling in HO. These data provide further understanding of nerve-to-vessel crosstalk in traumatized soft tissues, which may reflect a key determinant of mesenchymal progenitor cell fate after injury.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Physiology,Histology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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