Spatial Distribution of Senescent Cells and Their Proximity to Immune Subsets in the Human Endometrium During the Implantation Window
Dimitar Parvanov, Rumiana Ganeva, Margarita Ruseva, Maria Handzhiyska, Jinahn Safir, Lachezar Jelezarsky, Nina Vidolova, Dimitar Metodiev, Georgi Stamenov, Savina Hadjidekova

TL;DR
This study maps the location of senescent cells in the human endometrium during implantation and finds they are unevenly spread and closer to certain immune cells.
Contribution
The study introduces spatial profiling of senescent cells in the endometrium and their proximity to immune subsets as a potential diagnostic marker.
Findings
Senescent cells are heterogeneously distributed in the endometrial stroma with occasional high-density clusters.
Macrophages and monocytes are positioned closest to senescent cells, while T-helper and B cells are farther away.
Senescent cells show limited spatial association with CD4+ and CD56+ immune cells, suggesting impaired immune-senescence interactions.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Senescent cells contribute to endometrial remodeling during the implantation window, but their spatial organization within the stroma remains poorly understood. This study aimed to characterize the distribution of senescent (p16-positive) cells in the functional layer of the endometrium and to evaluate their spatial relationships with immune cell subsets. Methods: Endometrial biopsies from 68 women undergoing IVF were collected during the mid-luteal phase (LH+7, corresponding to the implantation window). Samples were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for p16 and immune markers (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD14, CD68, CD56, CD79α). Images from adjacent serial sections were digitally aligned, and senescent cell density, clustering, and nearest-neighbor distances to immune cells were quantified using HALO Image Analysis software (v3.4). Ratios of senescent-to-immune cell abundance…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive System and Pregnancy · COVID-19 Impact on Reproduction · Endometriosis Research and Treatment
