Cell-fate transition and determination analysis of mouse male germ cells throughout development

Jiexiang Zhao(Southern Medical University), Ping Lü(Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China), Cong Wan(Southern Medical University), Yaping Huang(Southern Medical University), Manman Cui(Southern Medical University), Xinyan Yang(Southern Medical University), Yuqiong Hu(Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China), Yi Zheng(Southern Medical University), Ji Dong(Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China), Mei Wang(Southern Medical University), Shu Zhang(Ministry of Education of the People's Republic of China), Zhaoting Liu(Southern Medical University), Shuhui Bian(Peking University), Xiaoman Wang(Southern Medical University), Rui Wang(Peking University), Shaofang Ren(Southern Medical University), Dazhuang Wang(Southern Medical University), Zhaokai Yao(Southern Medical University), Gang Chang(Shenzhen University Health Science Center), Fuchou Tang(Peking University), Xiaoyang Zhao(Guangzhou Regenerative Medicine and Health Guangdong Laboratory)
Nature Communications
November 25, 2021
Cited by 102Open Access
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Abstract

Mammalian male germ cell development is a stepwise cell-fate transition process; however, the full-term developmental profile of male germ cells remains undefined. Here, by interrogating the high-precision transcriptome atlas of 11,598 cells covering 28 critical time-points, we demonstrate that cell-fate transition from mitotic to post-mitotic primordial germ cells is accompanied by transcriptome-scale reconfiguration and a transitional cell state. Notch signaling pathway is essential for initiating mitotic arrest and the maintenance of male germ cells' identities. Ablation of HELQ induces developmental arrest and abnormal transcriptome reprogramming of male germ cells, indicating the importance of cell cycle regulation for proper cell-fate transition. Finally, systematic human-mouse comparison reveals potential regulators whose deficiency contributed to human male infertility via mitotic arrest regulation. Collectively, our study provides an accurate and comprehensive transcriptome atlas of the male germline cycle and allows for an in-depth understanding of the cell-fate transition and determination underlying male germ cell development.


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