Monkey multi-organ cell atlas exposed to estrogen

Author:

Fang Wen1,Qu Jiao12,Zhao Wanjun1,Cao Xinran1,Liu Jinran1,Han Quan1,Chen Dijun1,Lv Wen3,Xie Yicheng4,Sun Yang12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Pharmaceutical Biotechnology, School of Life Sciences, Nanjing University , Nanjing 210023 , China

2. Jiangsu Key Laboratory of New Drug Research and Clinical Pharmacy, Xuzhou Medical University , Xuzhou 221004 , China

3. Department of Gynecology, Tongde Hospital of Zhejiang Province , Hangzhou 310012 , China

4. Children’s Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, National Clinical Research Center for Child Health , Hangzhou 310052 , China

Abstract

Abstract Awareness of estrogen’s effects on health is broadening rapidly. The effects of long-term high levels of estrogen on the body involve multiple organs. Here, we used both single-cell chromatin accessibility and RNA sequencing data to analyze the potential effect of estrogen on major organs. The integrated cell map enabled in-depth dissection and comparison of molecular dynamics, cell-type compositions, and cellular heterogeneity across multiple tissues and organs under estrogen stimulation. We also inferred pseudotime cell trajectories and cell–cell communications to uncover key molecular signatures underlying their cellular processes in major organs in response to estrogen. For example, estrogen could induce the differentiation of IFIT3+ neutrophils into S100A9+ neutrophils involved in the function of endosome-to-lysosome transport and the multivesicular body sorting pathway in liver tissues. Furthermore, through integration with human genome-wide association study data, we further identified a subset of risk genes during disease development that were induced by estrogen, such as AKT1 (related to endometrial cancer), CCND1 (related to breast cancer), HSPH1 (related to colorectal cancer), and COVID-19 and asthma-related risk genes. Our work uncovers the impact of estrogen on the major organs, constitutes a useful resource, and reveals the contribution and mechanism of estrogen to related diseases.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Innovation Team and Talents Cultivation Program

National Administration of Traditional Chinese Medicine

School of Life Science (NJU)-Sipimo Joint Funds and Mountain Climbing Talents Project of Nanjing University, China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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