Single cell dissection of early kidney development: multilineage priming.
Journal: 2014/September - Development (Cambridge)
ISSN: 1477-9129
Abstract:
We used a single cell RNA-seq strategy to create an atlas of gene expression patterns in the developing kidney. At several stages of kidney development, histologically uniform populations of cells give rise to multiple distinct lineages. We performed single cell RNA-seq analysis of total mouse kidneys at E11.5 and E12.5, as well as the renal vesicles at P4. We define an early stage of progenitor cell induction driven primarily by gene repression. Surprising stochastic expression of marker genes associated with differentiated cell types was observed in E11.5 progenitors. We provide a global view of the polarized gene expression already present in the renal vesicle, the first epithelial precursor of the nephron. We show that Hox gene read-through transcripts can be spliced to produce intergenic homeobox swaps. We also identify a surprising number of genes with partially degraded noncoding RNA. Perhaps most interesting, at early developmental times single cells often expressed genes related to several developmental pathways. This provides powerful evidence that initial organogenesis involves a process of multilineage priming. This is followed by a combination of gene repression, which turns off the genes associated with most possible lineages, and the activation of increasing numbers of genes driving the chosen developmental direction.
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Development 141(15): 3093-3101

Single cell dissection of early kidney development: multilineage priming

Supplementary Material

Supplementary Material:
Division of Developmental Biology, Cincinnati Children's Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA
Division of Urology, Cincinnati Children's Medical Center, 3333 Burnet Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA
Department of Internal Medicine/Renal Division, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO 63110, USA
Author for correspondence (gro.cmhcc@rettop.evets)
Received 2014 Mar 27; Accepted 2014 May 21.

Abstract

We used a single cell RNA-seq strategy to create an atlas of gene expression patterns in the developing kidney. At several stages of kidney development, histologically uniform populations of cells give rise to multiple distinct lineages. We performed single cell RNA-seq analysis of total mouse kidneys at E11.5 and E12.5, as well as the renal vesicles at P4. We define an early stage of progenitor cell induction driven primarily by gene repression. Surprising stochastic expression of marker genes associated with differentiated cell types was observed in E11.5 progenitors. We provide a global view of the polarized gene expression already present in the renal vesicle, the first epithelial precursor of the nephron. We show that Hox gene read-through transcripts can be spliced to produce intergenic homeobox swaps. We also identify a surprising number of genes with partially degraded noncoding RNA. Perhaps most interesting, at early developmental times single cells often expressed genes related to several developmental pathways. This provides powerful evidence that initial organogenesis involves a process of multilineage priming. This is followed by a combination of gene repression, which turns off the genes associated with most possible lineages, and the activation of increasing numbers of genes driving the chosen developmental direction.

Keywords: Kidney development, Single cell analysis, Multilineage priming, Mouse
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Acknowledgements

We thank Hung-Chi Liang and Shawn Smith for carrying out the Fluidigm-based single-cell RNA-seq data generation.

Acknowledgements

Footnotes

Competing interests

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

Author contributions

E.W.B. carried out the isolation of tissues, preparation of single cells, manual SCAMP amplifications for microarray analysis, analysis of Six2/Foxd1 double-positive cells, and helped in the analysis of data and writing of the paper. J.-S.P. and E.C. performed immunostains and helped in the writing of the paper. F.C. was responsible for the germline Foxd1-Cre/floxed stop lacZ reporter experiments showing Foxd1 expression in the nephron epithelial lineage. B.M. performed immunostains. S.S.P. was primarily responsible for data analysis and writing of the paper.

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) [RC4 {"type":"entrez-nucleotide","attrs":{"text":"DK090891","term_id":"187689016"}}DK090891]. Deposited in PMC for release after 12 months.

Supplementary material

Supplementary material available online at http://dev.biologists.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1242/dev.110601/-/DC1

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