HCA Data Explorer

Defining human mesenchymal and epithelial heterogeneity in response to oral inflammatory disease

Access Granted
Updated October 18, 2024

Human oral soft tissues provide the first barrier of defence against chronic inflammatory disease and hold a remarkable scarless wounding phenotype. Tissue homeostasis requires coordinated actions of epithelial, mesenchymal, and immune cells. However, the extent of heterogeneity within the human oral mucosa and how tissue cell types are affected during the course of disease progression is unknown. Using single-cell transcriptome profiling we reveal a striking remodelling of the epithelial and mesenchymal niches with a decrease in functional populations that are linked to the aetiology of the disease. Analysis of ligand-receptor interaction pairs identify potential intercellular hubs driving the inflammatory component of the disease. Our work establishes a reference map of the human oral mucosa in health and disease, and a framework for the development of new therapeutic strategies.

Val YianniKing's College Londonval.yianni@kcl.ac.uk
Val Yianni (Experimental Scientist)1
1King's College London
Brittney D Wick

To reference this project, please use the following link:

https://explore.data.humancellatlas.org/projects/783c9952-a4ae-4106-a6ce-56f20ce27f88
None
INSDC Project Accessions:GEO Series Accessions:INSDC Study Accessions:

Atlas

None

Analysis Portals

None

Project Label

HumanGumsNormalandDiseased

Species

Homo sapiens

Sample Type

specimens

Anatomical Entity

mouth

Organ Part

gingiva

Selected Cell Types

gingival epithelial cell

Disease Status (Specimen)

2 disease statuses

Disease Status (Donor)

2 disease statuses

Development Stage

human adult stage

Library Construction Method

10x 3' v3

Nucleic Acid Source

single cell

Paired End

false

Analysis Protocol

analysis_protocol_1

File Format

3 file formats

Cell Count Estimate

Unspecified

Donor Count

4
.h54 file(s)fastq.gz8 file(s)xlsx1 file(s)