In Immunity ; h5-index 136.0
Granulomas are lumps of immune cells that can form in various organs. Most granulomas appear unstructured, yet they have some resemblance to lymphoid organs. To better understand granuloma formation, we performed single-cell sequencing and spatial transcriptomics on granulomas from patients with sarcoidosis and bioinformatically reconstructed the underlying gene regulatory networks. We discovered an immune stimulatory environment in granulomas that repurposes transcriptional programs associated with lymphoid organ development. Granuloma formation followed characteristic spatial patterns and involved genes linked to immunometabolism, cytokine and chemokine signaling, and extracellular matrix remodeling. Three cell types emerged as key players in granuloma formation: metabolically reprogrammed macrophages, cytokine-producing Th17.1 cells, and fibroblasts with inflammatory and tissue-remodeling phenotypes. Pharmacological inhibition of one of the identified processes attenuated granuloma formation in a sarcoidosis mouse model. We show that human granulomas adopt characteristic aspects of normal lymphoid organ development in aberrant combinations, indicating that granulomas constitute aberrant lymphoid organs.
Krausgruber Thomas, Redl Anna, Barreca Daniele, Doberer Konstantin, Romanovskaia Daria, Dobnikar Lina, Guarini Maria, Unterluggauer Luisa, Kleissl Lisa, Atzmüller Denise, Mayerhofer Carolina, Kopf Aglaja, Saluzzo Simona, Lim Clarice X, Rexie Praveen, Weichhart Thomas, Bock Christoph, Stary Georg
2023-Feb-06
cellular interactions, cytokine signaling, extracellular matrix remodeling, granuloma, immunometabolism, single-cell transcriptomics, spatial transcriptomics