Author:
Pech Matthew F.,Garbuzov Alina,Hasegawa Kazuteru,Sukhwani Meena,Zhang Ruixuan J.,Benayoun Bérénice A.,Brockman Stephanie A.,Lin Shengda,Brunet Anne,Orwig Kyle E.,Artandi Steven E.
Abstract
Telomerase inactivation causes loss of the male germline in worms, fish, and mice, indicating a conserved dependence on telomere maintenance in this cell lineage. Here, using telomerase reverse transcriptase (Tert) reporter mice, we found that very high telomerase expression is a hallmark of undifferentiated spermatogonia, the mitotic population where germline stem cells reside. We exploited these high telomerase levels as a basis for purifying undifferentiated spermatogonia using fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Telomerase levels in undifferentiated spermatogonia and embryonic stem cells are comparable and much greater than in somatic progenitor compartments. Within the germline, we uncovered an unanticipated gradient of telomerase activity that also enables isolation of more mature populations. Transcriptomic comparisons of TertHigh undifferentiated spermatogonia and TertLow differentiated spermatogonia by RNA sequencing reveals marked differences in cell cycle and key molecular features of each compartment. Transplantation studies show that germline stem cell activity is confined to the TertHigh cKit− population. Telomere shortening in telomerase knockout strains causes depletion of undifferentiated spermatogonia and eventual loss of all germ cells after undifferentiated spermatogonia drop below a critical threshold. These data reveal that high telomerase expression is a fundamental characteristic of germline stem cells, thus explaining the broad dependence on telomerase for germline immortality in metazoans.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Glenn Foundation for Medical Research
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Developmental Biology,Genetics
Cited by
56 articles.
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