Spatial transcriptomics stratifies psoriatic disease severity by emergent cellular ecosystems

Rochelle Castillo(NYU Langone Health), Ikjot Sidhu(NYU Langone Health), Igor Dolgalev(NYU Langone Health), Tinyi Chu(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Aleksandr Prystupa(NYU Langone Health), Ipsita Subudhi(NYU Langone Health), Di Yan(NYU Langone Health), Piotr Konieczny(NYU Langone Health), Brandon Hsieh(NYU Langone Health), Rebecca H. Haberman(NYU Langone Health), Shanmugapriya Selvaraj(NYU Langone Health), Tomoe Shiomi(NYU Langone Health), Rhina Medina(NYU Langone Health), Parvathy V. Girija(NYU Langone Health), Adriana Heguy(NYU Langone Health), Cynthia A. Loomis(NYU Langone Health), Luis Chiriboga(NYU Langone Health), Christopher T. Ritchlin(University of Rochester Medical Center), María de la Luz García-Hernández(University of Rochester Medical Center), John A. Carucci(NYU Langone Health), S. Meehan(NYU Langone Health), Andrea L. Neimann(NYU Langone Health), Jóhann E. Guðjónsson(University of Michigan), José U. Scher(NYU Langone Health), Shruti Naik(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)
Science Immunology
June 2, 2023
Cited by 95Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Whereas the cellular and molecular features of human inflammatory skin diseases are well characterized, their tissue context and systemic impact remain poorly understood. We thus profiled human psoriasis (PsO) as a prototypic immune-mediated condition with a high predilection for extracutaneous involvement. Spatial transcriptomics (ST) analyses of 25 healthy, active lesion, and clinically uninvolved skin biopsies and integration with public single-cell transcriptomics data revealed marked differences in immune microniches between healthy and inflamed skin. Tissue-scale cartography further identified core disease features across all active lesions, including the emergence of an inflamed suprabasal epidermal state and the presence of B lymphocytes in lesional skin. Both lesional and distal nonlesional samples were stratified by skin disease severity and not by the presence of systemic disease. This segregation was driven by macrophage-, fibroblast-, and lymphatic-enriched spatial regions with gene signatures associated with metabolic dysfunction. Together, these findings suggest that mild and severe forms of PsO have distinct molecular features and that severe PsO may profoundly alter the cellular and metabolic composition of distal unaffected skin sites. In addition, our study provides a valuable resource for the research community to study spatial gene organization of healthy and inflamed human skin.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis