Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Animal Biotech Breeding National Engineering Laboratory for Animal Breeding Laboratory of Animal Genetics Breeding and Reproduction Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs College of Animal Science and Technology China Agricultural University Beijing 100193 China
2. Division of Genetics and Genomics Institute for Molecular Bioscience The University of Queensland Brisbane 4072 Australia
3. School of Chemistry & Molecular Biosciences The University of Queensland Brisbane 4067 Australia
4. Key Laboratory of Animal Genetics Breeding and Reproduction of Shaanxi Province Laboratory of Animal Fat Deposition & Muscle Development College of Animal Science and Technology Northwest A&F University Yangling 712100 China
Abstract
AbstractThe dermis and epidermis, crucial structural layers of the skin, encompass appendages, hair follicles (HFs), and intricate cellular heterogeneity. However, an integrated spatiotemporal transcriptomic atlas of embryonic skin has not yet been described and would be invaluable for studying skin‐related diseases in humans. Here, single‐cell and spatial transcriptomic analyses are performed on skin samples of normal and hairless fetal pigs across four developmental periods. The cross‐species comparison of skin cells illustrated that the pig epidermis is more representative of the human epidermis than mice epidermis. Moreover, Phenome‐wide association study analysis revealed that the conserved genes between pigs and humans are strongly associated with human skin‐related diseases. In the epidermis, two lineage differentiation trajectories describe hair follicle (HF) morphogenesis and epidermal development. By comparing normal and hairless fetal pigs, it is found that the hair placode (Pc), the most characteristic initial structure in HFs, arises from progenitor‐like OGN+/UCHL1+ cells. These progenitors appear earlier in development than the previously described early Pc cells and exhibit abnormal proliferation and migration during differentiation in hairless pigs. The study provides a valuable resource for in‐depth insights into HF development, which may serve as a key reference atlas for studying human skin disease etiology using porcine models.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Cited by
1 articles.
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