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A lineage-resolved molecular atlas of C. elegans embryogenesis at single-cell resolution.

Jonathan S PackerQin ZhuChau HuynhPriya SivaramakrishnanElicia PrestonHannah DueckDerek J StefanikKai TanCole TrapnellJunhyong KimRobert H WaterstonJohn Isaac Murray
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2019)
Caenorhabditis elegans is an animal with few cells but a wide diversity of cell types. In this study, we characterize the molecular basis for their specification by profiling the transcriptomes of 86,024 single embryonic cells. We identify 502 terminal and preterminal cell types, mapping most single-cell transcriptomes to their exact position in C. elegans' invariant lineage. Using these annotations, we find that (i) the correlation between a cell's lineage and its transcriptome increases from middle to late gastrulation, then falls substantially as cells in the nervous system and pharynx adopt their terminal fates; (ii) multilineage priming contributes to the differentiation of sister cells at dozens of lineage branches; and (iii) most distinct lineages that produce the same anatomical cell type converge to a homogenous transcriptomic state.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • induced apoptosis
  • high throughput
  • cell cycle arrest
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress
  • cell death
  • gene expression
  • signaling pathway
  • cell therapy
  • bone marrow
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • high density