Dissecting human embryonic skeletal stem cell ontogeny by single-cell transcriptomic and functional analyses

Jian He(Academy of Military Medical Sciences), Yan Jing(Academy of Military Medical Sciences), Jianfang Wang(Shanghai East Hospital), Liangyu Zhao(Shanghai Changzheng Hospital), Xin Qian(Academy of Military Medical Sciences), Yang Zeng(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Yuxi Sun(Tongji University), Han Zhang(Daping Hospital), Zhijie Bai(Academy of Military Medical Sciences), Zongcheng Li(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Yanli Ni(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Yandong Gong(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Yunqiao Li(Academy of Military Medical Sciences), Han He(Academy of Military Medical Sciences), Zhilei Bian(First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University), Yu Lan(Jinan University), Chunyu Ma(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Lihong Bian(Chinese PLA General Hospital), Heng Zhu(Beijing Radiation Center), Bing Liu(Jinan University), Rui Yue(Tongji University)
Cell Research
January 20, 2021
Cited by 138Open Access
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Abstract

Human skeletal stem cells (SSCs) have been discovered in fetal and adult long bones. However, the spatiotemporal ontogeny of human embryonic SSCs during early skeletogenesis remains elusive. Here we map the transcriptional landscape of human limb buds and embryonic long bones at single-cell resolution to address this fundamental question. We found remarkable heterogeneity within human limb bud mesenchyme and epithelium, and aligned them along the proximal-distal and anterior-posterior axes using known marker genes. Osteo-chondrogenic progenitors first appeared in the core limb bud mesenchyme, which give rise to multiple populations of stem/progenitor cells in embryonic long bones undergoing endochondral ossification. Importantly, a perichondrial embryonic skeletal stem/progenitor cell (eSSPC) subset was identified, which could self-renew and generate the osteochondral lineage cells, but not adipocytes or hematopoietic stroma. eSSPCs are marked by the adhesion molecule CADM1 and highly enriched with FOXP1/2 transcriptional network. Interestingly, neural crest-derived cells with similar phenotypic markers and transcriptional networks were also found in the sagittal suture of human embryonic calvaria. Taken together, this study revealed the cellular heterogeneity and lineage hierarchy during human embryonic skeletogenesis, and identified distinct skeletal stem/progenitor cells that orchestrate endochondral and intramembranous ossification.


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