Abstract

Cardiac fibrosis—the deposition of excess extracellular matrix in the heart—occurs during pathological cardiac remodelling and precedes cardiac dysfunction and heart failure. Experimental and clinical data show that both cardiac fibrosis and heart failure exhibit sex-specific differences, particularly in the absence of ischemic injury. However, no study to date has systematically examined this, or the hormonal mechanisms driving these differences, using high-resolution single-cell and spatial omics. To address this gap, we applied single-cell and spatial omics to map the quality and distribution of non-ischemic cardiac fibrosis in human and mouse hearts. Further, to query the impact of sex hormones on cardiac fibrosis development, we analysed hearts of castrated (CAST) and ovariectomized (OVX) mice, which were ectopically infused with angiotensin-II (AngII). Using single cell transcriptomic data of hypertensive mouse hearts, we identified a fibroblast population driving cardiac fibrosis with a unique gene signature. We confirmed the presence of these cells in multiple mouse models and aged donor human hearts. Spatial mapping of fibrosis showed a sex-specific distribution of fibrosis, specifically in the development of perivascular fibrosis in the heart. Hypertensive male mice exhibited extensive perivascular fibrosis, and coronary artery adventitial hypertrophy, which was absent in females. However, OVX resulted in the development of perivascular fibrosis in hypertensive mice suggesting a cardioprotective role of estrogen. Confirming these observations, spatial transcriptomic analyses showed distinct fibrotic signatures driving perivascular and interstitial fibrosis, and transcriptomic differences between females and males. Our findings provide fundamental new insights towards the importance of biological sex in driving cardiac fibrosis, pointing to new mechanisms that may be manipulated to ameliorate development of heart failure.

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