High resolution mouse subventricular zone stem cell niche transcriptomereveals features of lineage, anatomy, and aging

Published: July 29, 2020, 2:01 a.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.07.27.223602v1?rss=1 Authors: Xie, X. P., Laks, D. R., Sun, D., Poran, A., Laughney, A. M., Wang, Z., Sam, J., Belenguer, G., Farinas, I., Elemento, O., Zhou, X., Parada, L. F. Abstract: Adult neural stem cells (NSC) serve as a reservoir for brain plasticity and origin for certain gliomas. Lineage tracing and genomic approaches have portrayed complex underlying heterogeneity within the major anatomical location for NSC, the subventricular zone (SVZ). To gain a comprehensive profile of NSC heterogeneity, we utilized a well validated stem/progenitor specific reporter transgene in concert with single cell RNA sequencing to achieve unbiased analysis of SVZ cells from infancy to advanced age. The magnitude and high specificity of the resulting transcriptional data sets allow precise identification of the varied cell types embedded in the SVZ including specialized parenchymal cells (neurons, glia, microglia), and non-central nervous system cells (endothelial, immune). Initial mining of the data delineates four quiescent NSC and three progenitor cell subpopulations formed in a linear progression. Further evidence indicates that distinct stem and progenitor populations reside in different regions of the SVZ. As stem/progenitor populations progress from neonatal to advanced age, they acquire a deficiency in transition from quiescence to proliferation. Further data mining identifies stage specific biological processes, transcription factor networks, and cell surface markers for investigation of cellular identities, lineage relationships, and key regulatory pathways in adult NSC maintenance and neurogenesis. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info