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MON-709 Single-Cell RNA-Sequencing Deciphers POMC Neuron Destiny

The hypothalamus is one of the critical brain nodes regulating body weight and energy homeostasis. Within this node, Pomc neurons sense nutrient and hormonal signals to release melanocortin peptides that induce satiety, whereas AgRP/NPY neurons exert opposite effects by releasing AGRP that promotes...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Yu, Hui, Jones, Graham, Thompson, Zoe, Rubinstein, Marcelo, Low, Malcolm James
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207671/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1333
Descripción
Sumario:The hypothalamus is one of the critical brain nodes regulating body weight and energy homeostasis. Within this node, Pomc neurons sense nutrient and hormonal signals to release melanocortin peptides that induce satiety, whereas AgRP/NPY neurons exert opposite effects by releasing AGRP that promotes feeding. Immature neurons in the hypothalamic ventricular zone start to express Pomc at E10.5, reach a maximum number at E14.5 and then decrease to stabilize at E18.5. However, it remains elusive how Pomc expressing precursors adopt their final cell fates. Therefore, the goal of this study was to decipher the temporal sequence of transcription factor (TF) expression leading to the terminal differentiation of POMC neurons. Red fluorescent cells collected from dissociated hypothalami of Pomc-tDimer-dsRed mice at six critical developmental time points - E11.5, E13.5, E15.5, E17.5, P5 and P12- were FACS sorted for the 10X genomics scRNA-seq pipeline. Unsupervised cell clustering identified 11 distinct clusters based on their transcriptional profiles. Eight of the clusters were highly-enriched for neuronal signature genes and were further characterized based on their transcript levels for Pomc (high, medium or low) and other distinct feature genes. Cells in the Pomc(high) cluster expressed genes identified previously to modulate Pomc expression, including Isl1, Nkx2-1, and Tbx3, together with several novel candidate TFs. Unexpectedly, Nr5a1, the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus marker gene encoding SF1, was highly expressed in the Pomc(high) cluster at early stages. One of the Pomc(low) clusters highly expressed Otp, Agrp, Npy, Sst and Calcr while a second was highly enriched with Tac2, Kiss1, Pdyn, Prlr, Ar and Esr1 transcripts. All the clusters showed direct correlations of embryonic stage with the expression of progressively more mature markers of differentiation, thereby extending previous reports of these clusters based on single time points. Moreover, our results uncovered five novel Pomc neuron clusters with unique patterns of TF gene expression. For comparison of these data to the adult hypothalamus, we performed a TRAP-Seq study using Pomc(CreERT),Rosa26(eGFP-L10a) mice. Prdm12 and Tbx3 were among the most highly differentially expressed TFs in the POMC neuron affinity purified translatome. Similarly, Cited1, Npy2r, and Asb4 were highly expressed in both the Pomc(high) cluster and the TRAP-Seq derived POMC translatome. This comprehensive molecular characterization of POMC cells during development sheds new light on the molecular diversification of early POMC neuron precursors and provides a valuable resource for elucidating the regulatory mechanisms defining POMC neuron subgroups in the hypothalamus.