Cell type atlas and lineage tree of a whole complex animal by single-cell transcriptomics

Mireya Plass(Max Delbrück Center), Jordi Solana(Max Delbrück Center), F. Alexander Wolf(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Salah Ayoub(Max Delbrück Center), Aristotelis Misios(Max Delbrück Center), Petar Glažar(Max Delbrück Center), Benedikt Obermayer(Max Delbrück Center), Fabian J. Theis(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Christine Kocks(Max Delbrück Center), Nikolaus Rajewsky(Max Delbrück Center)
Science
April 19, 2018
Cited by 518

Abstract

Mapping the planarian transcriptome A cell type's transcriptome defines the active genes that control its biology. Two groups used single-cell RNA sequencing to define the transcriptomes for essentially all cell types of a complete animal, the regenerative planarian Schmidtea mediterranea. Because pluripotent stem cells constantly differentiate to rejuvenate any part of the body of this species, all developmental lineages are active in adult animals. Fincher et al. determined the transcriptomes for most, if not all, planarian cell types, including some that were previously unknown. They also identified transition states and genes governing positional information. Plass et al. used single-cell transcriptomics and computational algorithms to reconstruct a lineage tree capturing the developmental progressions from stem to differentiated cells. They could then predict gene programs that are specifically turned on and off along the tree, and they used this approach to study how the cell types behaved during regeneration. These whole-animal transcriptome “atlases” are a powerful way to study metazoan biology. Science , this issue p. eaaq1736 , p. eaaq1723


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