Abstract
AbstractSpecialized signaling centers orchestrate robust development and regeneration. Limb morphogenesis, for instance, requires interactions between the mesoderm and the signaling center apical-ectodermal ridge (AER), whose properties and role in cell fate decisions have remained challenging to dissect. To tackle this, we developed mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs)-based heterogeneous cultures and a limb organoid model, termed budoids, comprising cells with AER, surface ectoderm, and mesoderm properties. mESCs were first induced into heterogeneous cultures that self-organized into domes in 2D. Aggregating these cultures resulted in formation of limb bud-like structures in 3D, exhibiting chondrogenesis-based symmetry breaking and elongation. Using our organoids and quantitative in situ expression profiling, we uncovered that AER-like cells support nearby limb mesoderm and fibroblast identities while enhancing tissue polarization that permits distant cartilage formation. Together, our findings provide a powerful model to study aspects of limb morphogenesis, and reveal the ability of signaling center AER cells to concurrently modulate cell fate and spatial organization.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Reference57 articles.
1. Tissues and Cell Types of Appendage Regeneration: A Detailed Look at the Wound Epidermis and Its Specialized Forms;Frontiers in Physiology,2021
2. The Apical Ectodermal Ridge: morphological aspects and signaling pathways
3. Vertebrate limb bud development: moving towards integrative analysis of organogenesis
4. Geetha-Loganathan, P. , Nimmagadda, S. , Christ, B. , Huang, R. & Scaal, M . Ectodermal Wnt6 is an early negative regulator of limb chondrogenesis in the chicken embryo. BMC Developmental Biology 10, 32 (2010).
5. Epithelial morphogenesis in organoids;Current Opinion in Genetics & Development,2022