4.7 Article

The Presence of Pre-Existing Endometriotic Lesions Promotes the Growth of New Lesions in the Peritoneal Cavity

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms241813858

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endometriosis; ultrasound; bioluminescence; mice; proliferation; inflammation; immune cells; vascularization

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This study reveals that the presence of pre-existing endometriotic lesions promotes the growth of new lesions, not through cell exchange, but rather through peritoneal inflammation induced by established lesions. These findings indicate that the chronic nature of endometriosis may be driven by a lesion-induced inflammatory milieu in the peritoneal cavity, creating favorable conditions for the development of new lesions.
Endometriosis is a common gynecological disease which is characterized by endometriotic lesions outside the uterine cavity. In this study, we investigated whether the presence of pre-existing endometriotic lesions promotes the development of new lesions due to the exchange of cells and an altered peritoneal environment. For this purpose, uterine tissue samples from FVB/N wild-type donor mice were transplanted simultaneously or time-delayed with samples from transgenic FVB-Tg(CAG-luc-GFP)L2G85Chco/J donor mice into the abdominal cavity of FVB/N wild-type recipient mice. The formation of endometriotic lesions was analyzed by means of high-resolution ultrasound, bioluminescence imaging, histology and immunohistochemistry. Moreover, immune cells and inflammatory factors in the peritoneal fluid were assessed by flow cytometry and a cytokine array. These analyses revealed that the growth of newly developing endometriotic lesions is promoted by the presence of pre-existing ones. This is not due to an exchange of cells between both lesion types but rather caused by peritoneal inflammation induced by already established lesions. These findings indicate that, among other pathogenic mechanisms, the chronic nature of endometriosis may be driven by a lesion-induced inflammatory milieu in the peritoneal cavity, which creates favorable conditions for the development of new lesions.

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