Single cell and spatial transcriptomics in human tendon disease indicate dysregulated immune homeostasis

2021 
Tendinopathy; encompassing multifactorial tendon disorders characterised by pain and functional limitation remains a significant burden in musculoskeletal medicine.1 Recent findings highlight a key role for immune mediated mechanisms in tendon disease supporting the concept that pivotal immunological and biomechanical factors conventionally associated with inflammatory rheumatic and musculoskeletal diseases (RMDs) are manifest in tendon.2 Single cell technologies3 (scRNAseq) are increasingly applied in rheumatology to identify key cellular phenotypes that drive disease pathogenesis. Despite efforts with small cell numbers and heterogenous tendon biopsies4 there remains no detailed spatial tendon cell atlas to inform translational targeting. Herein, for the first time utilising scRNAseq and spatial transcriptomics (ST), we carry out cell–cell interaction analysis to build an atlas of the dynamic cellular environment that drives the development of chronic human tendon disease. In healthy (4 biopsies, n=3040 cells) and diseased (5 biopsies, n=19 084 cells) tendon we find a mix of endothelial, immune and stromal cells (figure 1A, online supplemental file 1). Each cell type group is present in disease and healthy tissue but with distinct quantitative and qualitative characteristics. Within stromal populations we identified ‘mural type’ stromal cells (figure 1B). Mural cells, which include pericytes, are possible progenitor cells in tendon5 and interestingly, these cells are phenotypically similar to NOTCH3 high mural cells described in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovium which can differentiate into fibroblasts following interactions with endothelial cells (ECs) via JAG1 .6 Cell–cell interaction and ST analysis indicate a similar phenomenon could occur within tendinopathy between mural cells and SEMA3G ECs (figure 1F). In all diseased stromal cell populations, there was greater expression of genes for extracellular matrix proteins (eg, COL1A1 , COL3A1 , FN1 , BGN ) which is considered the hallmark feature of tendinopathy (online supplemental figure S2B). Furthermore, pathway analysis indicates stromal …
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