Contractile fibroblasts form a transient niche for the branching mammary epithelium

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Authors

SUMBAL Jakub JOURNOT Robin P ATTRI Kriti DANEK Veronika MERLE Candice FARALDO Marisa M SUMBALOVA KOLEDOVA Zuzana FRE Silvia

Year of publication 2025
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Nature communications
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
web https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-63612-x
Doi https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63612-x
Keywords transient fibroblast niche; mammary gland branching; contractile fibroblasts; stromal–epithelial interaction; single-cell RNA sequencing
Description Fibroblasts are stromal cells found in connective tissue that are critical for organ development, tissue homeostasis and pathology. Single-cell transcriptomic analyses have revealed a high level of inter- and intra-organ heterogeneity of fibroblasts. However, the functional implications and lineage relations of different fibroblast subtypes remained unexplored, especially in the mammary gland. Here, we provide a comprehensive characterization of pubertal mouse mammary fibroblasts, through single-cell RNA sequencing, spatial mapping, functional assays, and in vivo lineage tracing. We unravel a transient niche-forming population of specialized contractile fibroblasts that exclusively localize around the tips of the growing mammary epithelium and are recruited from preadipocytes in the surrounding fat pad stroma. Using organoid-fibroblast co-cultures we reveal that different fibroblast populations can acquire contractile features when in direct contact with the epithelium, promoting organoid branching. The detailed in vivo characterization of these specialized cells and their lineage history provides insights into fibroblast heterogeneity and implicates their importance for creating a signalling niche during mouse mammary gland development.
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