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Mouse embryonic stem cells can differentiate via multiple paths to the same state

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2017

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eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd
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Briggs, James Alexander, Victor C Li, Seungkyu Lee, Clifford J Woolf, Allon Klein, and Marc W Kirschner. 2017. “Mouse embryonic stem cells can differentiate via multiple paths to the same state.” eLife 6 (1): e26945. doi:10.7554/eLife.26945. http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.26945.

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Abstract

In embryonic development, cells differentiate through stereotypical sequences of intermediate states to generate particular mature fates. By contrast, driving differentiation by ectopically expressing terminal transcription factors (direct programming) can generate similar fates by alternative routes. How differentiation in direct programming relates to embryonic differentiation is unclear. We applied single-cell RNA sequencing to compare two motor neuron differentiation protocols: a standard protocol approximating the embryonic lineage, and a direct programming method. Both initially undergo similar early neural commitment. Later, the direct programming path diverges into a novel transitional state rather than following the expected embryonic spinal intermediates. The novel state in direct programming has specific and uncharacteristic gene expression. It forms a loop in gene expression space that converges separately onto the same final motor neuron state as the standard path. Despite their different developmental histories, motor neurons from both protocols structurally, functionally, and transcriptionally resemble motor neurons isolated from embryos.

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stem cell differentiation, direct programming, single cell RNA-seq, motor neuron, differentiation trajectory, embryonic development, Mouse

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