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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Integrated human and mouse single-cell profiling reveals immune-stromal niche driving silicosis.

Journal:
Mucosal immunology
Year:
2026
Authors:
Begka, Christina et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Immunology · Australia

Abstract

Silicosis is an inflammation-driven pulmonary fibrosis caused by occupational inhalation of silica particles. Macrophages are crucial in silicosis pathology, yet their interaction with stromal cells in orchestrating fibrosis progression remains poorly understood. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) of whole-lung lavages from silicosis patients identified the expansion of an intermediate CCL2-hi monocyte-like macrophage (MLM) cluster that further differentiated into inflammatory IL1B-hi and pre-fibrotic SPP1-hi (osteopontin) subsets. SPP1-hi MLMs showed enrichment for tissue remodelling (SPP1, CHI3L1, MMP14, COL6A1), oxidative stress (GCLC, TXN, PRDX1), and bio-mineralisation genes (GLA, CA2, CTSK). To explore immune-stromal dynamics, we developed a site-specific silicosis mouse model with a miniture bronchoscope. Mouse scRNAseq analysis and cell-cell communication modelling identified novel neutrophil subsets, reprogrammed alveolar type 2 epithelial cells, and two Sfrp1-hi/Spp1-hi fibroblast subsets involved in crosstalk with MLMs. These data identify key components of the silicotic niche and predict targetable interactions within the immune-stromal axis for ameliorating disease.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41520918/