Maintenance of pluripotency in the entire ectoderm enables neural crest formation.
Ceren PajanojaJenny HsinBradley OlingerAndrew SchiffmacherShaun AbramsArvydas DapkunasZarin ZainulAndrew DoyleDaniel MartinLaura KerosuoPublished in: Research square (2023)
The ability of the pluripotent epiblast to contribute progeny to all three germ layers is thought to be lost after gastrulation. The later-forming neural crest (NC) rises from ectoderm and it remains poorly understood how its exceptionally high stem-cell potential to generate mesodermal- and endodermal-like cells is obtained. We monitored transcriptional changes from gastrulation to neurulation using single-cell-Multiplex-Spatial-Transcriptomics (scMST) complemented with RNA-sequencing. Unexpectedly, we find maintenance of undecided Nanog/Oct4-PouV/Klf4-positive pluripotent-like pan-ectodermal stem-cells spanning the entire ectoderm late in the neurulation process with ectodermal patterning completed only at the end of neurulation when pluripotency becomes restricted to NC, challenging our understanding of gastrulation. Furthermore, broad ectodermal pluripotency is found at all axial levels unrelated to the NC lineage the cells later commit to, suggesting a general role in stemness enhancement and proposing a mechanism by which the NC acquires its ability to form derivatives beyond "ectodermal-capacity" in chick and mouse embryos.
Keyphrases
- stem cells
- single cell
- cell fate
- rna seq
- embryonic stem cells
- high throughput
- induced apoptosis
- transcription factor
- cell cycle arrest
- gene expression
- cell therapy
- optical coherence tomography
- diabetic retinopathy
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- bone marrow
- signaling pathway
- heat stress
- mesenchymal stem cells
- climate change
- pi k akt