Single cell transcriptomics reveals chondrocyte differentiation dynamics in vivo and in vitro
Single cell transcriptomics reveals chondrocyte differentiation dynamics in vivo and in vitro
About this item
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Author / Creator
Lawrence, John E G , Woods, Steven , Roberts, Kenny , Sumanaweera, Dinithi N , Balogh, Petra , Predeus, Alexander V , He, Peng , Li, Tong , Polanski, Krzysztof , Prigmore, Elena , Tuck, Elizabeth , Lira Mamanova , Zhou, Di , Webb, Simone , Jardine, Laura , He, Xiaoling , Barker, Roger A , Haniffa, Muzlifah , Flanagan, Adrienne M , Young, Matthew D , Behjati, Sam , Bayraktar, Omer , Kimber, Susan J and Teichmann, Sarah
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Journal title
Language
English
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Publication information
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
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More information
Scope and Contents
Contents
The consistent production of in vitro chondrocytes that faithfully recapitulate in vivo development would be of great benefit for musculoskeletal disease modelling and regenerative medicine. Current efforts are often limited by off-target differentiation, resulting in a heterogeneous product. Furthermore, the lack of comparison to human embryonic tissue, precludes detailed evaluation of in vitro cells. Here, we perform single-cell RNA sequencing of embryonic long bones dissected from first trimester hind limbs from a range of gestational ages. We combine this with publicly available data to form a detailed atlas of endochondral ossification, which we then use to evaluate a series of published in vitro chondrogenesis protocols, finding substantial variability in cell states produced by each. We apply single-nuclear RNA sequencing to one protocol to enable direct comparison between in vitro and in vivo, and perform trajectory alignment between the two to reveal differentiation dynamics at the single-cell level, shedding new light on off-target differentiation in vitro. Using this information, we inhibit the activity of FOXO1, a transcription factor predicted to be active in embryonic bone development and in chondrogenic cells in vitro, and increase chondrocyte transcripts in vitro. This study therefore presents a new framework for evaluating tissue engineering protocols, using single-cell data from human development to drive improvement and bring the prospect of true engineered cartilage closer to reality.Competing Interest StatementIn the past three years, S.A.T. has consulted for or been a member of scientific advisory boards at Qiagen, Sanofi, GlaxoSmithKline and ForeSite Labs. She is a consultant and equity holder for TransitionBio and EnsoCell. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.Footnotes* https://chondrocytes.cellgeni.sanger.ac.uk/...
Alternative Titles
Full title
Single cell transcriptomics reveals chondrocyte differentiation dynamics in vivo and in vitro
Authors, Artists and Contributors
Author / Creator
Woods, Steven
Roberts, Kenny
Sumanaweera, Dinithi N
Balogh, Petra
Predeus, Alexander V
He, Peng
Li, Tong
Polanski, Krzysztof
Prigmore, Elena
Tuck, Elizabeth
Lira Mamanova
Zhou, Di
Webb, Simone
Jardine, Laura
He, Xiaoling
Barker, Roger A
Haniffa, Muzlifah
Flanagan, Adrienne M
Young, Matthew D
Behjati, Sam
Bayraktar, Omer
Kimber, Susan J
Teichmann, Sarah
Identifiers
Primary Identifiers
Record Identifier
TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2904451920
Permalink
https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2904451920
Other Identifiers
ISSN
2692-8205
E-ISSN
2692-8205
DOI
10.1101/2023.12.20.572425