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Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development

Rationale: Stem cells self-organize to form organoids that generate mini-organs that resemble the physiologically-developed ones. The mechanism by which the stem cells acquire the initial potential for generating mini-organs remains elusive. Here we used skin organoids as an example to study how mec...

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Autores principales: Wang, Mengyue, Zhou, Xun, Zhou, Siyi, Wang, Miaomiao, Jiang, Jingwei, Wu, Wang, Liu, Tiantian, Xu, Wei, Zhang, Jinwei, Liu, Deming, Zou, Yi, Qiu, Weiming, Zhang, Man, Liu, Weiwei, Li, Zeming, Wang, Dehuan, Li, Tingting, Li, Ji, Liu, Wanqian, Yang, Li, Lei, Mingxing
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10240816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37284452
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.83217
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author Wang, Mengyue
Zhou, Xun
Zhou, Siyi
Wang, Miaomiao
Jiang, Jingwei
Wu, Wang
Liu, Tiantian
Xu, Wei
Zhang, Jinwei
Liu, Deming
Zou, Yi
Qiu, Weiming
Zhang, Man
Liu, Weiwei
Li, Zeming
Wang, Dehuan
Li, Tingting
Li, Ji
Liu, Wanqian
Yang, Li
Lei, Mingxing
author_facet Wang, Mengyue
Zhou, Xun
Zhou, Siyi
Wang, Miaomiao
Jiang, Jingwei
Wu, Wang
Liu, Tiantian
Xu, Wei
Zhang, Jinwei
Liu, Deming
Zou, Yi
Qiu, Weiming
Zhang, Man
Liu, Weiwei
Li, Zeming
Wang, Dehuan
Li, Tingting
Li, Ji
Liu, Wanqian
Yang, Li
Lei, Mingxing
author_sort Wang, Mengyue
collection PubMed
description Rationale: Stem cells self-organize to form organoids that generate mini-organs that resemble the physiologically-developed ones. The mechanism by which the stem cells acquire the initial potential for generating mini-organs remains elusive. Here we used skin organoids as an example to study how mechanical force drives initial epidermal-dermal interaction which potentiates skin organoids to regenerate hair follicles. Methods: Live imaging analysis, single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis, and immunofluorescence were used to analyze the contractile force of dermal cells in skin organoids. Bulk RNA-sequencing analysis, calcium probe detection, and functional perturbations were used to verify that calcium signaling pathways respond to the contractile force of dermal cells. In vitro mechanical loading experiment was used to prove that the stretching force triggers the epidermal Piezo1 expression which negatively regulates dermal cell attachment. Transplantation assay was used to test the regenerative ability of skin organoids. Results: We found that dermal cell-derived contraction force drives the movement of dermal cells surrounding the epidermal aggregates to trigger initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction (MEI). In response to dermal cell contraction force, the arrangement of the dermal cytoskeleton was negatively regulated by the calcium signaling pathway which further influences dermal-epidermal attachment. The native contraction force generated from the dermal cell movement exerts a stretching force on the adjacent epidermal cells, activating the stretching force sensor Piezo1 in the epidermal basal cells during organoid culture. Epidermal Piezo1 in turn drives strong MEI to negatively regulate dermal cell attachment. Proper initial MEI by mechanical-chemical coupling during organoid culture is required for hair regeneration upon transplantation of the skin organoids into the back of the nude mice. Conclusion: Our study demonstrated that mechanical-chemical cascade drives the initial event of MEI during skin organoid development, which is fundamental to the organoid, developmental, and regenerative biology fields.
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spelling pubmed-102408162023-06-06 Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development Wang, Mengyue Zhou, Xun Zhou, Siyi Wang, Miaomiao Jiang, Jingwei Wu, Wang Liu, Tiantian Xu, Wei Zhang, Jinwei Liu, Deming Zou, Yi Qiu, Weiming Zhang, Man Liu, Weiwei Li, Zeming Wang, Dehuan Li, Tingting Li, Ji Liu, Wanqian Yang, Li Lei, Mingxing Theranostics Research Paper Rationale: Stem cells self-organize to form organoids that generate mini-organs that resemble the physiologically-developed ones. The mechanism by which the stem cells acquire the initial potential for generating mini-organs remains elusive. Here we used skin organoids as an example to study how mechanical force drives initial epidermal-dermal interaction which potentiates skin organoids to regenerate hair follicles. Methods: Live imaging analysis, single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis, and immunofluorescence were used to analyze the contractile force of dermal cells in skin organoids. Bulk RNA-sequencing analysis, calcium probe detection, and functional perturbations were used to verify that calcium signaling pathways respond to the contractile force of dermal cells. In vitro mechanical loading experiment was used to prove that the stretching force triggers the epidermal Piezo1 expression which negatively regulates dermal cell attachment. Transplantation assay was used to test the regenerative ability of skin organoids. Results: We found that dermal cell-derived contraction force drives the movement of dermal cells surrounding the epidermal aggregates to trigger initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction (MEI). In response to dermal cell contraction force, the arrangement of the dermal cytoskeleton was negatively regulated by the calcium signaling pathway which further influences dermal-epidermal attachment. The native contraction force generated from the dermal cell movement exerts a stretching force on the adjacent epidermal cells, activating the stretching force sensor Piezo1 in the epidermal basal cells during organoid culture. Epidermal Piezo1 in turn drives strong MEI to negatively regulate dermal cell attachment. Proper initial MEI by mechanical-chemical coupling during organoid culture is required for hair regeneration upon transplantation of the skin organoids into the back of the nude mice. Conclusion: Our study demonstrated that mechanical-chemical cascade drives the initial event of MEI during skin organoid development, which is fundamental to the organoid, developmental, and regenerative biology fields. Ivyspring International Publisher 2023-05-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10240816/ /pubmed/37284452 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.83217 Text en © The author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Wang, Mengyue
Zhou, Xun
Zhou, Siyi
Wang, Miaomiao
Jiang, Jingwei
Wu, Wang
Liu, Tiantian
Xu, Wei
Zhang, Jinwei
Liu, Deming
Zou, Yi
Qiu, Weiming
Zhang, Man
Liu, Weiwei
Li, Zeming
Wang, Dehuan
Li, Tingting
Li, Ji
Liu, Wanqian
Yang, Li
Lei, Mingxing
Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
title Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
title_full Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
title_fullStr Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
title_short Mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
title_sort mechanical force drives the initial mesenchymal-epithelial interaction during skin organoid development
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10240816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37284452
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/thno.83217
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