Multi-Omics Reveals the Genetic and Metabolomic Architecture of Chirality Directed Stem Cell Lineage Diversification.
Huimin ZhengShengjie JiangMeijun LiJinying LiuXiaowei WangMing Hua LiuChuan-Liang FengYan WeiXuliang DengPublished in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2023)
Chirality-directed stem-cell-fate determination involves coordinated transcriptional and metabolomics programming that is only partially understood. Here, using high-throughput transcriptional-metabolic profiling and pipeline network analysis, the molecular architecture of chirality-guided mesenchymal stem cell lineage diversification is revealed. A total of 4769 genes and 250 metabolites are identified that are significantly biased by the biomimetic chiral extracellular microenvironment (ECM). Chirality-dependent energetic metabolism analysis has revealed that glycolysis is preferred during left-handed ECM-facilitated osteogenic differentiation, whereas oxidative phosphorylation is favored during right-handed ECM-promoted adipogenic differentiation. Stereo-specificity in the global metabolite landscape is also demonstrated, in which amino acids are enriched in left-handed ECM, while ether lipids and nucleotides are enriched in right-handed ECM. Furthermore, chirality-ordered transcriptomic-metabolic regulatory networks are established, which address the role of positive feedback loops between key genes and central metabolites in driving lineage diversification. The highly integrated genotype-phenotype picture of stereochemical selectivity would provide the fundamental principle of regenerative material design.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- stem cells
- high throughput
- rna seq
- mesenchymal stem cells
- extracellular matrix
- network analysis
- genome wide
- transcription factor
- bone marrow
- cell therapy
- ms ms
- gene expression
- amino acid
- umbilical cord
- dna methylation
- genome wide identification
- ionic liquid
- bioinformatics analysis
- tissue engineering
- molecularly imprinted
- protein kinase
- genome wide analysis
- structural basis
- cell fate