Cellular senescence is implicated as a driver of ovarian aging, but senescent cells in the human postmenopausal ovary remain poorly defined. Using spatially resolved p16INK4a protein expression, a canonical senescence marker, we identified and mapped senescent cells in postmenopausal ovaries. We integrated p16 immunohistochemistry, multiplexed immunofluorescence, spatial transcriptomics, and AI-guided digital pathology to map senescent microenvironments. p16-positive cells formed discrete stromal, vascular, and cyst-associated clusters that increased with age and were enriched for macrophages and myofibroblast-like cells. Whole-transcriptome profiling of 92 spatial regions uncovered a 32-gene p16-associated signature, BuckSenOvary, that distinguished p16-positive regions across cortex and medulla. BuckSenOvary is characterized by suppression of cell-cycle regulators and activation of inflammatory and extracellular-matrix remodelling genes. AI-based collagen matrix analysis confirmed that p16-positive regions exhibit more architecturally complex collagen, demonstrating that focal senescent microenvironments are fibro-inflammatory. These findings position senescent ovarian niches as therapeutic targets to preserve ovarian function.
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Schilling et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a766fcbadf0bb9e87df313 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-8290960/v1
Birgit Schilling
Buck Institute for Research on Aging
Mark Watson
Buck Institute for Research on Aging
Pooja Devrukhkar
Johns Hopkins University
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Buck Institute for Research on Aging
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