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Cell-cell communication through FGF4 generates and maintains robust proportions of differentiated cell types in embryonic stem cells.

Dhruv RainaAzra BahadoriAngel StanoevMichelle ProtzekAneta KoseskaChristian Schröter
Published in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2021)
During embryonic development and tissue homeostasis, reproducible proportions of differentiated cell types are specified from populations of multipotent precursor cells. Molecular mechanisms that enable both robust cell-type proportioning despite variable initial conditions in the precursor cells, and the re-establishment of these proportions upon perturbations in a developing tissue remain to be characterized. Here, we report that the differentiation of robust proportions of epiblast-like and primitive endoderm-like cells in mouse embryonic stem cell cultures emerges at the population level through cell-cell communication via a short-range fibroblast growth factor 4 (FGF4) signal. We characterize the molecular and dynamical properties of the communication mechanism and show how it controls both robust cell-type proportioning from a wide range of experimentally controlled initial conditions, as well as the autonomous re-establishment of these proportions following the isolation of one cell type. The generation and maintenance of reproducible proportions of discrete cell types is a new function for FGF signaling that might operate in a range of developing tissues.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • cell therapy
  • stem cells
  • gene expression
  • induced apoptosis
  • oxidative stress
  • cell death
  • signaling pathway