Showing gene expression patterns. Credit: DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-00000-0
Human fingers
and toes do not grow outward; instead, they form from within a larger
foundational bud, as intervening cells recede to reveal the digits beneath.
This is among many processes captured for the first time as scientists unveil a
spatial cell atlas of the entire developing human limb, resolved in space and
time.
Researchers at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, Sun
Yat-sen University, EMBL's European Bioinformatics Institute and collaborators
applied cutting-edge single-cell and spatial technologies to create an atlas characterizing
the cellular landscape of the early human limb, pinpointing
the exact location of cells.
This study is part of the international Human Cell
Atlas initiative to map every cell type in the human body, to transform understanding of health and disease.
The atlas, published in Nature,
provides an openly available resource that captures the intricate processes
governing the limbs' rapid development during the early stages of limb formation.
The atlas also uncovers new links between
developmental cells and some congenital limb syndromes, such as short fingers
and extra digits.
This video shows the dynamic gene expression
patterns of IRX1, SOX9 and MSX1, critical genes involved in limb formation.
Their distinct distribution ensures the 'chiselling' process takes place. IRX1,
crucial for digit formation, and SOX9, essential for skeletal development,
converge into five distinct lengths within the developing limb, while MSX1,
associated with undifferentiated cells, occupies the interdigital spaces
between these clusters. At approximately week seven of development, molecules
responsible for interdigital cell death are activated, leading to the
elimination of cells in the intervening spaces. This orchestrated cell death
finally unveils the well-defined shapes of fingers or toes. Credit: DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-00000-0
Limbs are known to initially emerge as undifferentiated cell pouches on the
sides of the body, without a specific shape or function. However after eight
weeks of development, they are well differentiated, anatomically complex and
immediately recognizable as limbs, complete with fingers and toes.
This requires a very rapid and precise orchestration of cells. Any small
disturbances to this process can have a downstream effect, which is why
variations in the limbs are among the most frequently reported syndromes at
birth, affecting approximately one in 500 births globally.
While limb development has been extensively studied in mouse and chick
models, the extent to which they mirror the human situation remained unclear.
However, advances in technology now enable researchers to explore the early
stages of human limb formation.
In this new study, scientists from the Wellcome Sanger Institute, Sun
Yat-sen University, and their collaborators analyzed tissues between five and
nine weeks of development. This allowed them to trace specific gene expression
programs, activated at certain times and in specific areas, which shape the
forming limbs.
Special staining of the tissue revealed clearly how cell populations
differentially arrange themselves into patterns of the forming digits.
As part of the study, researchers demonstrated that certain gene patterns
have implications for how the hands and feet form, identifying certain genes,
which when disrupted, are associated with specific limb syndromes like
brachydactyly—short fingers—and polysyndactyly—extra fingers or toes.
The team were also able to confirm that many aspects of limb development
are shared between humans and mice.
Overall, these findings not only provide an in-depth characterization of
limb development in humans but also critical insights that could impact the
diagnosis and treatment of congenital limb syndromes.
Professor Hongbo Zhang, senior author of the study from Sun Yat-sen
University, Guangzhou, said, "Decades of studying model organisms
established the basis for our understanding of vertebrate limb development.
However, characterizing this in humans has been elusive until now, and we
couldn't assume the relevance of mouse models for human development."
"What we reveal is a highly complex and precisely regulated process.
It is like watching a sculptor at work, chiseling away at a block of marble to
reveal a masterpiece. In this case, nature is the sculptor, and the result is
the incredible complexity of our fingers and toes."
Dr. Sarah Teichmann, senior author of the study from the Wellcome Sanger
Institute, and co-founder of the Human Cell Atlas, said, "For the first
time, we have been able to capture the remarkable process of limb development
down to single cell resolution in space and time."
"Our work in the Human Cell Atlas is deepening our understanding of how anatomically complex structures form, helping us uncover the genetic and cellular processes behind healthy human development, with many implications for research and health care. For instance, we discovered novel roles of key genes MSC and PITX1 that may regulate muscle stem cells. This could offer potential for treating muscle-related disorders or injuries."
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