Hair follicle stem cell fate supports distinct clinical endotypes in Hidradenitis Suppurativa
Abstract
Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a severe skin disorder affecting 1% of the global population, with a complex and poorly understood pathogenesis involving aberrant keratinization and autoinflammation. It remains unclear whether autoinflammatory events precede or follow hyperkeratotic changes in hair follicle (HF) epithelia.
Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we characterized HF cell populations in HS patients and investigated their role in disease pathogenesis. We uncovered two distinct differentiation trajectories of HF stem cells (HF-SCs): one leading to interfollicular epidermis (IFE) basal cells enriched in inflammatory pathways, and another giving rise to outer root sheath (ORS) cells associated with keratinization. In HS lesions, both populations displayed altered inflammatory phenotypes and were closely linked to immune cell infiltration, pointing to a role in disease heterogeneity. By integrating clinical features with HF cell composition from 49 HS patients, we identified three major endotypes: (i) an inflammatory subtype, marked by T cell infiltration and an expansion of IFE basal cells; (ii) a keratinizing subtype, characterized by ORS enrichment and minimal inflammation; and a mixed subtype, exhibiting features of follicular remodeling, fistula formation, and variable immune involvement.
These findings provide novel insights into the epithelial-immune interactions that drive HS and support a stratified therapeutic approach tailored to the specific HF dysfunctions of each patient subgroup.
Abstract Figure
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