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Functionally heterogeneous human satellite cells identified by single cell RNA sequencing

  • Emilie Barruet
  • , Steven M. Garcia
  • , Katharine Striedinger
  • , Jake Wu
  • , Solomon Lee
  • , Lauren Byrnes
  • , Alvin Wong
  • , Sun Xuefeng
  • , Stanley Tamaki
  • , Andrew S. Brack
  • , Jason H. Pomerantz
  • University of California at San Francisco

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

104 Scopus citations

Abstract

Although heterogeneity is recognized within the murine satellite cell pool, a comprehensive understanding of distinct subpopulations and their functional relevance in human satellite cells is lacking. We used a combination of single cell RNA sequencing and flow cytometry to identify, distinguish, and physically separate novel subpopulations of human PAX7+ satellite cells (Hu-MuSCs) from normal muscles. We found that, although relatively homogeneous compared to activated satellite cells and committed progenitors, the Hu-MuSC pool contains clusters of transcriptionally distinct cells with consistency across human individuals. New surface marker combinations were enriched in transcriptional subclusters, including a subpopulation of Hu-MuSCs marked by CXCR4/CD29/CD56/CAV1 (CAV1+). In vitro, CAV1+ Hu-MuSCs are morphologically distinct, and characterized by resistance to activation compared to CAV1-Hu-MuSCs. In vivo, CAV1 + Hu-MuSCs demonstrated increased engraftment after transplantation. Our findings provide a comprehensive transcriptional view of normal Hu-MuSCs and describe new heterogeneity, enabling separation of functionally distinct human satellite cell subpopulations.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere51576
JournaleLife
Volume9
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2020

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