Single-cell multiomic approaches define a gradual, spatially-regulated epigenetic and transcriptional transition from embryonic to adult neural stem cells [scRNA-seq]
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ABSTRACT: Here, we ask how adult neural stem cells (NSCs) arise developmentally, focusing on murine cortical precursors that generate excitatory neurons embryonically and interneurons and glial cells postnatally. Using complementary single-cell spatial, transcriptomic, and epigenomic approaches, we show that postnatal NSC state acquisition involves a gradual transcriptional and epigenetic shift in the entire embryonic cortical precursor cell population and identify a distinct transition precursor state at E17/18 when both embryonic and the first postnatal progeny are being generated. Non-proliferative adult NSCs are also first seen at this transition timepoint, but they arise in a spatial domain distinct from that of the first postnatal progeny, indicating that NSC state acquisition is not a necessary prelude to the switch in cell genesis. These findings support a gradual epigenetically-continuous model for the transition from developing cortical precursors to NSCs and show that this is spatially separable from the transition to generating postnatal cell types.
ORGANISM(S): Mus musculus
PROVIDER: GSE317356 | GEO | 2026/06/18
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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