Author:
Home Pratik,Ghosh Ananya,Kumar Ram Parikshan,Ray Soma,Gunewardena Sumedha,Kumar Rajnish,Dasgupta Purbasa,Roy Namrata,Saha Abhik,Ouseph Madhu M.,Leone Gustavo W.,Paul Soumen
Abstract
AbstractDuring embryonic development the placental vasculature acts as a major hematopoietic niche, where endothelial to hematopoietic transition ensures emergence of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). However, the molecular mechanisms that regulate the placental hematoendothelial niche are poorly understood. Using a parietal trophoblast giant cell (TGC)-specific knockout mouse model and single-cell RNA-sequencing, we show that the paracrine factors secreted by the TGCs are critical in the development of this niche. Disruptions in the TGC-specific paracrine signaling leads to the loss of HSC population and the concomitant expansion of a KDR+/DLL4+/PROM1+ hematoendothelial cell-population in the placenta. Combining single- cell transcriptomics and receptor-ligand pair analyses, we also define the parietal TGC- dependent paracrine signaling network and identify Integrin signaling as a fundamental regulator of this process. Our study elucidates novel mechanisms by which non-autonomous signaling from the primary parietal TGCs maintain the delicate placental hematopoietic- angiogenic balance and ensures embryonic and extraembryonic development.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory