TY - UNPB
T1 - Single-cell immune profiling of third trimester pregnancies defines importance of chemokine receptors and prevalence of CMV-induced NK cells in the periphery and decidua
AU - Habel, Jennifer R
AU - Nguyen, Thi H O
AU - Allen, Lilith F
AU - Hagen, Ruth R
AU - Kedzierski, Lukasz
AU - Allen, E Kaitlynn
AU - Jia, Xiaoxiao
AU - Li, Shihan
AU - Tarasova, Ilariya
AU - Minervina, Anastasia A
AU - Pogorelyy, Mikhail V
AU - Saunders, Philippa M
AU - Clatch, Allison
AU - Evrard, Maximilien
AU - Xu, Calvin
AU - Koay, Hui-Fern
AU - Khan, Md Abdullah-Al-Kamran
AU - de Alwis, Natasha
AU - Mackay, Laura K
AU - Barrow, Alexander D
AU - Douros, Celia
AU - Karapanagiotidis, Theo
AU - Nicholson, Suellen
AU - Bond, Katherine
AU - Williamson, Deborah A
AU - Lappas, Martha
AU - Walker, Susan
AU - Hannan, Natalie J
AU - Brooks, Andrew G
AU - Schroeder, Jan
AU - Crawford, Jeremy Chase
AU - Thomas, Paul G
AU - Rowntree, Louise C
AU - Kedzierska, Katherine
PY - 2025/3/25
Y1 - 2025/3/25
N2 - Human pregnancy presents a unique physiological state that allows for growth of an antigenically dissimilar foetus and requires specific adaptations of the immune system. The immune system plays an important role in establishing and maintaining successful pregnancy, yet deep understanding of immunological responses in pregnancy is lacking. To provide in-depth understanding of the immunological landscape of pregnancy, with a focus on NK cells, we used high-throughput cell surface proteome screening of >350 markers and scRNAseq with 130 CITE-seq antibodies to identify key differentially expressed molecules and investigated their potential roles in altered immunity. We identified skewing in NK cell subsets towards higher frequencies of CD56
bright cells caused by a reduced number of CD56
dim cells in the peripheral blood during pregnancy and provide evidence for a role of chemokine receptor, CX3CR1, in NK cell activation. In addition, we defined a new cytomegalovirus (CMV)-induced decidual NK cell population in CMV
+ pregnancies with tissue-residency markers. Overall, our data provide fundamental knowledge into how NK cell immunity is altered in pregnancy, and key knowledge needed to inform vaccine and therapeutic strategies to manage infections or pregnancy complications.
AB - Human pregnancy presents a unique physiological state that allows for growth of an antigenically dissimilar foetus and requires specific adaptations of the immune system. The immune system plays an important role in establishing and maintaining successful pregnancy, yet deep understanding of immunological responses in pregnancy is lacking. To provide in-depth understanding of the immunological landscape of pregnancy, with a focus on NK cells, we used high-throughput cell surface proteome screening of >350 markers and scRNAseq with 130 CITE-seq antibodies to identify key differentially expressed molecules and investigated their potential roles in altered immunity. We identified skewing in NK cell subsets towards higher frequencies of CD56
bright cells caused by a reduced number of CD56
dim cells in the peripheral blood during pregnancy and provide evidence for a role of chemokine receptor, CX3CR1, in NK cell activation. In addition, we defined a new cytomegalovirus (CMV)-induced decidual NK cell population in CMV
+ pregnancies with tissue-residency markers. Overall, our data provide fundamental knowledge into how NK cell immunity is altered in pregnancy, and key knowledge needed to inform vaccine and therapeutic strategies to manage infections or pregnancy complications.
U2 - 10.1101/2025.03.24.25324489
DO - 10.1101/2025.03.24.25324489
M3 - Preprint
C2 - 40196247
T3 - medRxiv : the preprint server for Health Sciences
BT - Single-cell immune profiling of third trimester pregnancies defines importance of chemokine receptors and prevalence of CMV-induced NK cells in the periphery and decidua
PB - arXiv
CY - USA
ER -