Skeletal stem and progenitor cells maintain cranial suture patency and prevent craniosynostosis

  • Siddharth Menon
  • , Ankit Salhotra
  • , Siny Shailendra
  • , Ruth Tevlin
  • , Ryan C. Ransom
  • , Michael Januszyk
  • , Charles K.F. Chan
  • , Björn Behr
  • , Derrick C. Wan
  • , Michael T. Longaker
  • , Natalina Quarto

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cranial sutures are major growth centers for the calvarial vault, and their premature fusion leads to a pathologic condition called craniosynostosis. This study investigates whether skeletal stem/progenitor cells are resident in the cranial sutures. Prospective isolation by FACS identifies this population with a significant difference in spatio-temporal representation between fusing versus patent sutures. Transcriptomic analysis highlights a distinct signature in cells derived from the physiological closing PF suture, and scRNA sequencing identifies transcriptional heterogeneity among sutures. Wnt-signaling activation increases skeletal stem/progenitor cells in sutures, whereas its inhibition decreases. Crossing Axin2LacZ/+ mouse, endowing enhanced Wnt activation, to a Twist1+/− mouse model of coronal craniosynostosis enriches skeletal stem/progenitor cells in sutures restoring patency. Co-transplantation of these cells with Wnt3a prevents resynostosis following suturectomy in Twist1+/− mice. Our study reveals that decrease and/or imbalance of skeletal stem/progenitor cells representation within sutures may underlie craniosynostosis. These findings have translational implications toward therapeutic approaches for craniosynostosis.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4640
JournalNature communications
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2021

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