Current understanding of molecular mechanisms driving moyamoya disease (MMD) remains limited. This study aimed to elucidate the role of TGF-β signaling in MMD vascular remodeling via endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EndMT). Spatial transcriptomics (10x Visium) was performed on 11 MMD specimens, while hematoxylin-eosin (HE) staining, immunohistochemistry (lHC), and immunofluorescence were conducted on a total of 51 MD and 11 control vascular specimens. Pseudotemporal trajectory analysis and cell-cell communication modeling were employed to map EndMT dynamics. MMD vessels exhibited intimal hyperplasia (STA: N1/Nâ=â0.38â±â0.12 vs 0.25â±â0.12, pâ<â0.01) and medial atrophy. Spatial transcriptomics identified dual-positive SMC-Endo clusters (13.6%) within hyperplastic intima, co-expressing endothelial (PECAM1, CDH5) and mesenchymal markers (ACTA2, S100A4). The TGF-β pathway was significantly enriched in EndMT-active cells (FDRâ=â2.1âÃâ10(-5)), with elevated TGFBR1 and Snail expression in MMD intima (TGFBR1: 0.020â±â0.008 vs 0.005â±â0.004, pâ<â0.001; Snail: 0.10â±â0.03 vs 0.06â±â0.02, pâ<â0.01). Cell-cell networks revealed TGF-β-driven pro-fibrotic interactions. Immunofluorescence confirmed increased PECAM1+ α-SMA+ dual-positive cells in MMD vessels. These findings establish TGF-β/Snail-driven EndMT as a key mechanism in MMD vascular remodeling. Targeting TGF-β signaling or transitional cell states may halt or potentially reverse intimal hyperplasia, offering novel therapeutic strategies. Further validation in preclinical models is warranted.
Spatial transcriptomics reveals TGF-β-driven endothelial-mesenchymal transition in vascular remodeling of moyamoya disease.
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作者:Xiao Jinlin, Wei Liwen, Chen Dianda, Qiu Xingpeng, Yan Jian, Li Youping, Lin Feng, Wu Xuye, Xiang Xiaofeng, Huang Yongxin, Yu Canyang, Wang Xinyang, Zhang Shuhua, Luo Daya, Zeng Erming
| 期刊: | Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 影响因子: | 4.500 |
| 时间: | 2026 | 起止号: | 2026 Apr;46(4):852-866 |
| doi: | 10.1177/0271678X251388370 | ||
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