Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Single-Cell RNA Sequencing of Human, Macaque, and Mouse Testes Uncovers Conserved and Divergent Features of Mammalian Spermatogenesis

2020; Elsevier BV; Volume: 54; Issue: 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.devcel.2020.05.010

ISSN

1878-1551

Autores

Adrienne Niederriter Shami, Xianing Zheng, Sarah Munyoki, Qianyi Ma, Gabriel Manske, Christopher D. Green, Meena Sukhwani, Kyle E. Orwig, Jun Z. Li, Saher Sue Hammoud,

Tópico(s)

Renal and related cancers

Resumo

Spermatogenesis is a highly regulated process that produces sperm to transmit genetic information to the next generation. Although extensively studied in mice, our current understanding of primate spermatogenesis is limited to populations defined by state-specific markers from rodent data. As between-species differences have been reported in the duration and differentiation hierarchy of this process, it remains unclear how molecular markers and cell states are conserved or have diverged from mice to man. To address this challenge, we employ single-cell RNA sequencing to identify transcriptional signatures of major germ and somatic cell types of the testes in human, macaque, and mice. This approach reveals similarities and differences in expression throughout spermatogenesis, including the stem/progenitor pool of spermatogonia, markers of differentiation, potential regulators of meiosis, RNA turnover during spermatid differentiation, and germ cell-soma communication. These datasets provide a rich foundation for future targeted mechanistic studies of primate germ cell development and in vitro gametogenesis.

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