Author:
Mayr Christoph H.,Sengupta Arunima,Ansari Meshal,Pestoni Jeanine C.,Ogar Paulina,Angelidis Ilias,Liontos Andreas,Rodriguez-Castillo Alberto,Lang Niklas J.,Strunz Maximilian,Asgharpour Sara,Porras-Gonzalez Diana,Gerckens Michael,Oehrle Bettina,Viteri-Alvarez Valeria,Fernandez Isis E.,Tallquist Michelle,Irmler Martin,Beckers Johannes,Eickelberg Oliver,Stoleriu Gabriel Mircea,Behr Jürgen,Kneidinger Nikolaus,Yildirim Ali Önder,Ahlbrecht Katrin,Morty Rory E.,Samakovlis Christos,Theis Fabian J.,Burgstaller Gerald,Schiller Herbert B.
Abstract
AbstractFibroblast to myofibroblast conversion is a major driver of tissue remodeling in organ fibrosis. Several distinct lineages of fibroblasts support homeostatic tissue niche functions, yet, specific activation states and phenotypic trajectories of fibroblasts during injury and repair have remained unclear. Here, we combined spatial transcriptomics, longitudinal single-cell RNA-seq and genetic lineage tracing to study fibroblast fates during mouse lung regeneration. We discovered a transitional fibroblast state characterized by high Sfrp1 expression, derived from both Tcf21-Cre lineage positive and negative cells. Sfrp1+ cells appeared early after injury in peribronchiolar, adventitial and alveolar locations and preceded the emergence of myofibroblasts. We identified lineage specific paracrine signals and inferred converging transcriptional trajectories towards Sfrp1+ transitional fibroblasts and Cthrc1+ myofibroblasts. Tgfβ1 downregulated Sfrp1 in non-invasive transitional cells and induced their switch to an invasive Cthrc1+ myofibroblast identity. Finally, using loss of function studies we showed that autocrine Sfrp1 directly inhibits fibroblast invasion by regulating the RhoA pathway. In summary, our study reveals the convergence of spatially and transcriptionally distinct fibroblast lineages into transcriptionally uniform myofibroblasts and identifies Sfrp1 as an autocrine inhibitor of fibroblast invasion during early stages of fibrogenesis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory