Spatiotemporal transcriptome at single-cell resolution reveals key radial glial cell population in axolotl telencephalon development and regeneration
Author:
Wei Xiaoyu, Fu Sulei, Li Hanbo, Liu Yang, Wang Shuai, Feng Weimin, Yang Yunzhi, Liu Xiawei, Zeng Yan-Yun, Cheng Mengnan, Lai Yiwei, Qiu Xiaojie, Wu Liang, Zhang Nannan, Jiang Yujia, Xu Jiangshan, Su Xiaoshan, Peng Cheng, Han Lei, Lou Wilson Pak-Kin, Liu Chuanyu, Yuan Yue, Ma Kailong, Yang Tao, Pan XiangyuORCID, Gao Shang, Chen Ao, Esteban Miguel A., Yang Huanming, Wang Jian, Fan Guangyi, Liu Longqi, Chen Liang, Xu Xun, Fei Ji-Feng, Gu YingORCID
Abstract
SUMMARYBrain regeneration requires a precise coordination of complex responses in a time- and region-specific manner. Identifying key cell types and molecules that direct brain regeneration would provide potential targets for the advance of regenerative medicine. However, progress in the field has been hampered largely due to limited regeneration capacity of the mammalian brain and understanding of the regeneration process at both cellular and molecular level. Here, using axolotl brain with extrodinary regeneration ability upon injury, and the SpaTial Enhanced REsolution Omics-sequencing (Stereo-seq), we reconstructed the first architecture of axolotl telencephalon with gene expression profiling at single-cell resolution, and fine cell dynamics maps throughout development and regeneration. Intriguingly, we discovered a marked heterogeneity of radial glial cell (RGC) types with distinct behaviors. Of note, one subtype of RGCs is activated since early regeneration stages and proliferates while other RGCs remain dormant. Such RGC subtype appears to be the major cell population involved in early wound healing response and gradually covers the injured area before presumably transformed into the lost neurons. Altogether, our work systematically decoded the complex cellular and molecular dynamics of axolotl telencephalon in development and regeneration, laying the foundation for studying the regulatory mechanism of brain regeneration in the future.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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