Tissue-wide genetic and cellular landscape shapes the execution of sequential PRC2 functions in neural stem cell lineage progression.
Nicole AmbergFlorian M PaulerCarmen StreicherSimon HippenmeyerPublished in: Science advances (2022)
The generation of a correctly sized cerebral cortex with all-embracing neuronal and glial cell-type diversity critically depends on faithful radial glial progenitor (RGP) cell proliferation/differentiation programs. Temporal RGP lineage progression is regulated by Polycomb repressive complex 2 (PRC2), and loss of PRC2 activity results in severe neurogenesis defects and microcephaly. How PRC2-dependent gene expression instructs RGP lineage progression is unknown. Here, we use mosaic analysis with double markers (MADM)-based single-cell technology and demonstrate that PRC2 is not cell-autonomously required in neurogenic RGPs but rather acts at the global tissue-wide level. Conversely, cortical astrocyte production and maturation is cell-autonomously controlled by PRC2-dependent transcriptional regulation. We thus reveal highly distinct and sequential PRC2 functions in RGP lineage progression that are dependent on complex interplays between intrinsic and tissue-wide properties. In a broader context, our results imply a critical role for the genetic and cellular niche environment in neural stem cell behavior.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- rna seq
- stem cells
- gene expression
- high throughput
- cell proliferation
- zika virus
- genome wide
- public health
- neuropathic pain
- spinal cord injury
- cell therapy
- dna methylation
- cell fate
- cerebral ischemia
- intellectual disability
- copy number
- mesenchymal stem cells
- spinal cord
- bone marrow
- cell cycle
- ultrasound guided
- data analysis