AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers found that these endometriotic lesions use more sugar for energy, which suggests that we might be able to treat the disease without hormones by focusing on how the cells get their energy.
  • * They studied different types of cells in both healthy and affected tissue from women with endometriosis and discovered that certain cells change a lot in terms of energy use, pointing to new ways to possibly treat the disease.

Article Abstract

Current therapeutics of endometriosis focus on hormonal disruption of endometriotic lesions (ectopic endometrium, EcE). Recent findings show higher glycolysis utilization in EcE, suggesting non-hormonal strategy for disease treatment that addresses cellular metabolism. Identifying metabolically altered cell types in EcE is important for targeted metabolic drug therapy without affecting eutopic endometrium (EuE). Here, using single-cell RNA-sequencing, we examine twelve metabolic pathways in paired samples of EuE and EcE from women with confirmed endometriosis. We detect nine major cell types in both EuE and EcE. Metabolic pathways are most differentially regulated in perivascular, stromal, and endothelial cells, with the highest changes in AMPK signaling, HIF-1 signaling, glutathione metabolism, oxidative phosphorylation, and glycolysis. We identify transcriptomic co-activation of glycolytic and oxidative metabolism in perivascular and stromal cells of EcE, indicating a critical role of metabolic reprogramming in maintaining endometriotic lesion growth. Perivascular cells, involved in endometrial stroma repair and angiogenesis, may be potential targets for non-hormonal treatment of endometriosis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11339455PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06713-5DOI Listing

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