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A population of stem cells with strong regenerative potential discovered in deer antlers.

Tao QinGuokun ZhangYi ZhengShengyou LiYuan YuanQingjie LiMing-Liang HuHuazhe SiGuanning WeiXueli GaoXinxin CuiBing XiaJing RenKun WangHengxing BaZhen LiuRasmus HellerZhipeng LiWen WangJinghui HuangChunyi LiQiang Qiu
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
The annual regrowth of deer antlers provides a valuable model for studying organ regeneration in mammals. We describe a single-cell atlas of antler regrowth. The earliest-stage antler initiators were mesenchymal cells that express the paired related homeobox 1 gene ( PRRX1 + mesenchymal cells). We also identified a population of "antler blastema progenitor cells" (ABPCs) that developed from the PRRX1 + mesenchymal cells and directed the antler regeneration process. Cross-species comparisons identified ABPCs in several mammalian blastema. In vivo and in vitro ABPCs displayed strong self-renewal ability and could generate osteochondral lineage cells. Last, we observed a spatially well-structured pattern of cellular and gene expression in antler growth center during the peak growth stage, revealing the cellular mechanisms involved in rapid antler elongation.
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