A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Transcriptomic responses to hypoxia in endometrial and decidual stromal cells




AuthorsRytkönen KT, Heinosalo T, Mahmoudian M, Ma X, Perheentupa A, Elo LL, Poutanen M, Wagner GP

Publication year2020

JournalReproduction

Journal name in sourceReproduction (Cambridge, England)

Journal acronymReproduction

Volume160

Issue1

First page 39

Last page51

Number of pages13

ISSN1470-1626

eISSN1741-7899

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1530/REP-19-0615

Web address https://rep.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/rep/160/1/REP-19-0615.xml


Abstract
Human reproductive success depends on a properly decidualized uterine endometrium that allows implantation and the formation of the placenta. At the core of the decidualization process are endometrial stromal fibroblasts (ESF) that differentiate to decidual stromal cells (DSC). As variations in oxygen levels are functionally relevant in endometrium both upon menstruation and during placentation, we assessed the transcriptomic responses to hypoxia in ESF and DSC. In both cell types, hypoxia-upregulated genes in classical hypoxia pathways such as glycolysis and the epithelial mesenchymal transition. In DSC, hypoxia restored an ESF-like transcriptional state for a subset of transcription factors that are known targets of the progesterone receptor, suggesting that hypoxia partially interferes with progesterone signaling. In both cell types, hypoxia modified transcription of several inflammatory transcription factors that are known regulators of decidualization, including decreased transcription of STATs and increased transcription of CEBPs. We observed that hypoxia-upregulated genes in ESF and DSC had a significant overlap with genes previously detected to be upregulated in endometriotic stromal cells. Promoter analysis of the genes in this overlap suggested the hypoxia-upregulated Jun/Fos and CEBP transcription factors as potential drivers of endometriosis-associated transcription. Using immunohistochemistry, we observed increased expression of JUND and CEBPD in endometriosis lesions compared to healthy endometria. Overall, the findings suggest that hypoxic stress establishes distinct transcriptional states in ESF and DSC and that hypoxia influences the expression of genes that contribute to the core gene regulation of endometriotic stromal cells.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:56