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QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration

PURPOSE: Repair of distal phalanx amputation is widely studied and thought to occur through a regenerative process. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA) has greatly improved the ability to characterize the cells that are involved in regeneration and abnormal healing of bone and soft tissue. Given the...

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Autores principales: Pagani, Chase A., Patel, Nicole, Edwards, Nicole J., Hespe, Geoffrey, Livingston, Nicholas, Nunez, Johanna, Strong, Amy L., Huber, Amanda K., Levi, Benjamin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8312837/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.GOX.0000769976.55775.fc
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author Pagani, Chase A.
Patel, Nicole
Edwards, Nicole J.
Hespe, Geoffrey
Livingston, Nicholas
Nunez, Johanna
Strong, Amy L.
Huber, Amanda K.
Levi, Benjamin
author_facet Pagani, Chase A.
Patel, Nicole
Edwards, Nicole J.
Hespe, Geoffrey
Livingston, Nicholas
Nunez, Johanna
Strong, Amy L.
Huber, Amanda K.
Levi, Benjamin
author_sort Pagani, Chase A.
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Repair of distal phalanx amputation is widely studied and thought to occur through a regenerative process. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA) has greatly improved the ability to characterize the cells that are involved in regeneration and abnormal healing of bone and soft tissue. Given the disorganized architecture of digit tip “regenerated” bone and its common progenitor cell to the pathologic process of heterotopic ossification, we hypothesized that digit tip repair after injury follows a program of aberrant wound repair rather than true regeneration of normal bone tissue. METHODS: ScRNA data of mouse digit tip amputation (DTA) and embryonic limb development (EMB) was downloaded from NBCI GEO data base ascension number GSE135985. Additionally, scRNA data from heterotopic ossification (HO) was downloaded from GSE126060. HO, DTA, and EMB datasets were clustered individually. HO was merged and aligned with EMB and DT in separate analyses. Cells expressing the mesenchymal progenitor cell (MPC) marker Pdgfra, which we have shown to differentiate into HO and others have shown to differentiate into bone after DTA, were identified and analyzed in the HO-DTA and HO-EMB datasets. Monocle 2, Seurat 3.1.1, and Pearson correlation analysis were used for analysis and visualization. Immunostaining for markers present in DTA (ACAN, FBN-2, LTBP2) was performed on sections collected from a murine model of traumatic HO in Pdgfra-CreER;TdTomato mice induced with tamoxifen one-week prior to HO-forming injury. RESULTS: MPC clusters from DTA and HO and from EMB and HO were aligned and projected using UMAP to compare transcription profiles. Across the timepoints, MPCs in the DTA and HO occupy similar regions of the UMAP plot, while MPCs in EMB and HO occupy largely independent regions, with only overlap at the latest time points. Using Monocle 2, cells were placed on a virtual timeline based on similarities in transcription. MPCs from DTA and HO meet at the same location on the trajectory following injury. In the EMB to HO comparison, cells only occupy similar regions of the trajectory at post-natal day 3 suggesting that bone is formed by different pathways. To understand correlations between time points, transcriptomes were also compared by Pearson analysis. MPCs following HO and DTA injuries occupy similar regions of the plot while MPCs in EMB and HO only occupy similar regions of the correlation plot at P3. Markers previously identified to be upregulated in MPCs in DTA were also upregulated in MPCs in HO by both scRNA and immunofluorescent histology. CONCLUSIONS: Cells responsible for bone repair following DTA show similar transcriptional profiles as MPCs in traumatic HO and dissimilar to MPCs in EMB. Furthermore, MPCs in both digit tip repair and HO follow trajectories that do not overlap with embryonic limb development. Thus, we demonstrate for the first time, that the process following DTA is not truly regeneration and follows programs of aberrant repair as seen in HO.
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spelling pubmed-83128372021-07-27 QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration Pagani, Chase A. Patel, Nicole Edwards, Nicole J. Hespe, Geoffrey Livingston, Nicholas Nunez, Johanna Strong, Amy L. Huber, Amanda K. Levi, Benjamin Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open PSRC 2021 Abstract Supplement PURPOSE: Repair of distal phalanx amputation is widely studied and thought to occur through a regenerative process. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA) has greatly improved the ability to characterize the cells that are involved in regeneration and abnormal healing of bone and soft tissue. Given the disorganized architecture of digit tip “regenerated” bone and its common progenitor cell to the pathologic process of heterotopic ossification, we hypothesized that digit tip repair after injury follows a program of aberrant wound repair rather than true regeneration of normal bone tissue. METHODS: ScRNA data of mouse digit tip amputation (DTA) and embryonic limb development (EMB) was downloaded from NBCI GEO data base ascension number GSE135985. Additionally, scRNA data from heterotopic ossification (HO) was downloaded from GSE126060. HO, DTA, and EMB datasets were clustered individually. HO was merged and aligned with EMB and DT in separate analyses. Cells expressing the mesenchymal progenitor cell (MPC) marker Pdgfra, which we have shown to differentiate into HO and others have shown to differentiate into bone after DTA, were identified and analyzed in the HO-DTA and HO-EMB datasets. Monocle 2, Seurat 3.1.1, and Pearson correlation analysis were used for analysis and visualization. Immunostaining for markers present in DTA (ACAN, FBN-2, LTBP2) was performed on sections collected from a murine model of traumatic HO in Pdgfra-CreER;TdTomato mice induced with tamoxifen one-week prior to HO-forming injury. RESULTS: MPC clusters from DTA and HO and from EMB and HO were aligned and projected using UMAP to compare transcription profiles. Across the timepoints, MPCs in the DTA and HO occupy similar regions of the UMAP plot, while MPCs in EMB and HO occupy largely independent regions, with only overlap at the latest time points. Using Monocle 2, cells were placed on a virtual timeline based on similarities in transcription. MPCs from DTA and HO meet at the same location on the trajectory following injury. In the EMB to HO comparison, cells only occupy similar regions of the trajectory at post-natal day 3 suggesting that bone is formed by different pathways. To understand correlations between time points, transcriptomes were also compared by Pearson analysis. MPCs following HO and DTA injuries occupy similar regions of the plot while MPCs in EMB and HO only occupy similar regions of the correlation plot at P3. Markers previously identified to be upregulated in MPCs in DTA were also upregulated in MPCs in HO by both scRNA and immunofluorescent histology. CONCLUSIONS: Cells responsible for bone repair following DTA show similar transcriptional profiles as MPCs in traumatic HO and dissimilar to MPCs in EMB. Furthermore, MPCs in both digit tip repair and HO follow trajectories that do not overlap with embryonic limb development. Thus, we demonstrate for the first time, that the process following DTA is not truly regeneration and follows programs of aberrant repair as seen in HO. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 2021-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC8312837/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.GOX.0000769976.55775.fc Text en Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of The American Society of Plastic Surgeons. All rights reserved. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives License 4.0 (CCBY-NC-ND) (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) , where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.
spellingShingle PSRC 2021 Abstract Supplement
Pagani, Chase A.
Patel, Nicole
Edwards, Nicole J.
Hespe, Geoffrey
Livingston, Nicholas
Nunez, Johanna
Strong, Amy L.
Huber, Amanda K.
Levi, Benjamin
QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration
title QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration
title_full QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration
title_fullStr QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration
title_full_unstemmed QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration
title_short QS7: Digit Tip Regeneration Following Amputation Is Not True Regeneration
title_sort qs7: digit tip regeneration following amputation is not true regeneration
topic PSRC 2021 Abstract Supplement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8312837/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.GOX.0000769976.55775.fc
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