Abstract
AbstractEmbryos from different mammalian species develop at characteristic timescales. These timescales are recapitulated during the differentiation of pluripotent stem cellsin vitro. Specific genes and molecular pathways that modulate cell differentiation speed between mammalian species remain to be determined. Here we use single-cell multi-omic analysis of neural differentiation of mouse, cynomolgus and human pluripotent cells to identify regulators for differentiation speed. We demonstrate that species-specific transcriptome dynamics are mirrored at the chromatin level, but that the speed of neural differentiation is insensitive to manipulations of cell growth and cycling. Exploiting the single-cell resolution of our data, we identify glycogen storage levels regulated by UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase 2 (UGP2) as a species-dependent trait of pluripotent cells, and show that lowered glycogen storage in UGP2 mutant cells is associated with accelerated neural differentiation. The control of energy storage could be a general strategy for the regulation of cell differentiation speed.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory