Human oral mucosa cell atlas reveals a stromal-neutrophil axis regulating tissue immunity

The oral mucosa remains an understudied barrier tissue. This is a site of rich exposure to antigens and commensals, and a tissue susceptible to one of the most prevalent human inflammatory diseases, periodontitis. To aid in understanding tissue-specific pathophysiology, we compile a single-cell transcriptome atlas of human oral mucosa in healthy individuals and patients with periodontitis. We uncover the complex cellular landscape of oral mucosal tissues and identify epithelial and stromal cell populations with inflammatory signatures that promote antimicrobial defenses and neutrophil recruitment. Our findings link exaggerated stromal cell responsiveness with enhanced neutrophil and leukocyte infiltration in periodontitis. Our work provides a resource characterizing the role of tissue stroma in regulating mucosal tissue homeostasis and disease pathogenesis.

Contact
Niki Moutsopoulos
DOI
10.1016/j.cell.2021.05.013
Release
14 June 2021
Lab
Moutsopoulos Lab
Tissue
Buccal Mucosa, Gingival Mucosa
Assay
10x 3'
Disease
None, Periodontitis
Organism
Homo sapiens

scRNA-seq Datasets

Dataset
Tissue
Assay
Disease
Organism
Count
Gingival Mucosa
10x 3'
None,Periodontitis
Homo sapiens
87240
Buccal Mucosa
Gingival Mucosa
10x 3'
None
Homo sapiens
87334

Reproducibility

Reproducibility is a major principle underpinning the scientific method. We make publicly available the raw data and analysis scripts associated with each collection.

Human Cell Atlas

Human Cell Atlas

The Human Cell Atlas aims to create comprehensive reference maps of all human cells—the fundamental units of life—as a basis for both understanding human health and diagnosing, monitoring, and treating disease.

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