Generation of salivary glands derived from pluripotent stem cells via conditional blastocyst complementation.
Junichi TanakaAkihiro MiuraYuko ShimamuraYoungmin HwangDai ShimizuYuri KondoAnri SawadaHemanta SarmahZurab NinishKenji MishimaMunemasa MoriPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Various patients suffer from dry mouth due to salivary gland dysfunction. Whole salivary gland generation and transplantation is a potential therapy to resolve this issue. However, the lineage permissible to design the entire salivary gland generation has been enigmatic. Here, we discovered Foxa2 as a lineage critical for generating a salivary gland via conditional blastocyst complementation (CBC). Foxa2 linage, but not Shh nor Pitx2, initiated to label between the boundary region of the endodermal and the ectodermal oral mucosa before primordial salivary gland formation, resulting in marking the entire salivary gland. The salivary gland was agenesis by depleting Fgfr2 under the Foxa2 lineage in the mice. We rescued this phenotype by injecting donor pluripotent stem cells into the mouse blastocysts. Those mice survived until adulthood with normal salivary glands compatible in size compared with littermate controls. These results indicated that CBC-based salivary gland generation is promising for next-generation cell-based therapy.