Single-cell analysis reveals fibroblast heterogeneity and myeloid-derived adipocyte progenitors in murine skin wounds

Christian F. Guerrero‐Juarez(University of California, Irvine), Priya H. Dedhia(Cancer Research Institute), Suoqin Jin(University of California, Irvine), Rolando Ruiz(University of California, Irvine), Dennis Ma(University of California, Irvine), Yu‐Chen Liu(University of California, Irvine), Kosuke Yamaga(University of California, Irvine), Olga Shestova(Cancer Research Institute), Denise Gay(Inserm), Zaixin Yang(University of Pennsylvania), Kai Kessenbrock(University of California, Irvine), Qing Nie(University of California, Irvine), Warren S. Pear(Cancer Research Institute), George Cotsarelis(University of Pennsylvania), Maksim V. Plikus(University of California, Irvine)
Nature Communications
February 8, 2019
Cited by 536Open Access
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Abstract

During wound healing in adult mouse skin, hair follicles and then adipocytes regenerate. Adipocytes regenerate from myofibroblasts, a specialized contractile wound fibroblast. Here we study wound fibroblast diversity using single-cell RNA-sequencing. On analysis, wound fibroblasts group into twelve clusters. Pseudotime and RNA velocity analyses reveal that some clusters likely represent consecutive differentiation states toward a contractile phenotype, while others appear to represent distinct fibroblast lineages. One subset of fibroblasts expresses hematopoietic markers, suggesting their myeloid origin. We validate this finding using single-cell western blot and single-cell RNA-sequencing on genetically labeled myofibroblasts. Using bone marrow transplantation and Cre recombinase-based lineage tracing experiments, we rule out cell fusion events and confirm that hematopoietic lineage cells give rise to a subset of myofibroblasts and rare regenerated adipocytes. In conclusion, our study reveals that wounding induces a high degree of heterogeneity among fibroblasts and recruits highly plastic myeloid cells that contribute to adipocyte regeneration.


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