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Epitenon-derived progenitors drive fibrosis and regeneration after flexor tendon injury in a spatially-dependent manner

Anne E. C. Nichols, Lauren Benoodt, Emmanuella Adjei‐Sowah, Kyle Jerreld, Alexander Kollar, Constantinos Ketonis, Alayna E. Loiselle

2025Nature Communications9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Flexor tendon injuries are common and heal poorly owing to both the deposition of function-limiting peritendinous scar tissue and insufficient healing of the tendon itself. Therapeutic options are limited due to a lack of understanding of the cell populations that contribute to these processes. Here, we identified the epitenon as a major source of cells that contribute to both peritendinous fibrosis and regenerative tendon healing following acute tendon injury. Using a combination of genetic lineage tracing and single cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq), we profiled the behavior and contributions of each cell fate to the healing process in a spatio-temporal manner. Integrated scRNA-seq analysis of mouse healing with human peritendinous scar tissue revealed remarkable transcriptional similarity between mouse epitenon-derived cells and fibroblasts present in human peritendinous scar tissue, which was further validated by immunofluorescent staining for conserved markers. Finally, ablation of pro-fibrotic epitenon-derived cells post-tendon injury significantly improved functional recovery. Combined, these results clearly identify the epitenon as the cellular origin of an important progenitor cell population that could be leveraged to improve tendon healing. The cell populations that contribute to healing and scar tissue formation following tendon injury are poorly defined. Here the authors show that cells originating from the tendon epitenon give rise to both tenogenic and fibrotic populations and that ablation of pro-fibrotic epitenon-derived cells improves recovery.

Topics & Concepts

Regeneration (biology)TendonFibrosisProgenitor cellBiologyProgenitorCell biologyMedicineAnatomyPathologyStem cellTendon Structure and TreatmentCellular Mechanics and InteractionsOrthopedic Surgery and Rehabilitation
Epitenon-derived progenitors drive fibrosis and regeneration after flexor tendon injury in a spatially-dependent manner | Litcius