Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology (Nov 2022)

Obesity alters the mouse endometrial transcriptome in a cell context-dependent manner

  • Mike R. Wilson,
  • Hilary Skalski,
  • Jake J. Reske,
  • Marc Wegener,
  • Marie Adams,
  • Galen Hostetter,
  • Hanne M. Hoffmann,
  • Jamie J. Bernard,
  • Victoria L. Bae-Jump,
  • Jose M. Teixeira,
  • Ronald L. Chandler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12958-022-01030-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Obesity impacts fertility and is positively correlated with endometrial hyperplasia and endometrial cancer occurrence. Endometrial epithelia often harbor disease driver-mutations, while endometrial stroma are highly regulative of neighboring epithelia. Here, we sought to determine distinct transcriptome changes occurring in individual cell types in the obese mouse uterus. Outbred CD-1 mice were fed high-fat or control diets for 18 weeks, estrous cycle staged, and endometrial epithelia, macrophages, and stroma isolated for transcriptomic analysis. High-fat diet mice displayed increased body mass and developed glucose intolerance, hyperinsulinemia, and fatty liver. Obese mouse epithelia displayed differential gene expression for genes related to innate immunity and leukocyte chemotaxis. The obese mouse stroma differentially expressed factors related to circadian rhythm, and expression of these genes correlated with glucose tolerance or body mass. We observed correlations between F4/80 + macrophage numbers, Cleaved Caspase 3 (CC3) apoptosis marker staining and glucose intolerance among obese mice, including a subgroup of obese mice with high CC3 + luminal epithelia. This subgroup displayed differential gene expression among all cell types, with pathways related to immune escape in epithelia and macrophages, while the stroma dysregulated pathways related to regulation of epithelia. These results suggest an important role for differential response of both the epithelia and stroma in their response to obesity, while macrophages are dysregulated in the context of apoptotic epithelia. The obesity-related gene expression programs in cells within the uterine microenvironment may influence the ability of the endometrium to function during pregnancy and influence disease pathogenesis.

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