A Cross-tissue Temporal Multi-omics Atlas Reveals the Molecular Architecture of Pressure Injury

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Abstract

Pressure injury induces progressive necrosis of skin and deep muscle, yet how mechanical loading reshapes molecular programs across tissues and time remains poorly defined. To address this gap, we established a rat pressure-injury model and performed longitudinal integrated profiling of skin and deep muscle across four stages, combining transcriptomics, proteomics and untargeted metabolomics with histological assessment. This multi-layered atlas revealed a staged injury program dominated by early transcriptional activation of innate immunity and complement-coagulation crosstalk, accompanied by neutrophil-associated responses and engagement of upstream regulatory networks. As injury advanced, a second axis of remodeling emerged, characterized by sustained suppression of mitochondrial energy metabolism and oxidative phosphorylation, particularly in muscle, together with extracellular matrix and adhesion rewiring. In parallel, skin preferentially activated barrier-repair and protein-homeostasis programs, including keratinization and autophagy-linked processes, indicating tissue-specific adaptation to the same mechanical insult. Temporal clustering and pathway-network analysis further showed that immune activation and metabolic collapse are not independent events but are dynamically coupled across stages, with muscle exhibiting broader molecular reprogramming and a stronger shift toward irreversible structural failure. Together, these data define a cross-tissue, stage-resolved molecular framework for pressure injury progression and identify pathway-level windows that may inform tissue-targeted and stage-specific intervention strategies.

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