{"database":"GEO","file_versions":[{"headers":{"Content-Type":["application/json"]},"body":{"files":{"Other":["ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/series/GSE309nnn/GSE309792/"]},"type":"primary"},"statusCode":"OK","statusCodeValue":200}],"scores":null,"additional":{"omics_type":["Transcriptomics"],"species":["Mus musculus"],"gds_type":["Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing"],"full_dataset_link":["https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE309792"],"repository":["GEO"],"entry_type":["GSE"],"additional_accession":[]},"is_claimable":false,"name":"Enhancer-directed gene delivery for digit regeneration based on conserved epidermal factors","description":"Limb loss remains a significant clinical challenge, but regenerative medicine approaches such as gene therapy offer a promising strategy to trigger endogenous regeneration programs. Optimal vector configurations and molecular targets for appendicular skeletal repair are not well defined. Here, we leveraged insights from species with a high endogenous capacity for appendage regeneration to design an enhancer-directed gene delivery platform that functions during mouse digit regeneration, a well characterized model for partial limb regeneration in mammals. Single-cell RNA sequencing of zebrafish caudal fin regeneration, combined with expression data in regenerating salamander limbs and mouse digit tips, implicated the SP family of transcription factors as conserved, epidermally-expressed mediators of appendage regrowth. Null mutants of Sp8 demonstrated impaired limb regeneration in salamanders, while conditional knockout of Sp6 and/or Sp8 in the mouse basal epidermis resulted in defective bony digit tip regeneration, involving an IL-17 mediated osteoclastogenic program. Spatiotemporally focused expression of FGF8, a known target of SP factors, using a zebrafish-derived tissue regeneration enhancer element via adeno-associated viral vectors, could partially rescue digit tip regeneration in SP knockout mice and accelerate digit regeneration in wildtype mice. Our results demonstrate a contextual gene therapy approach to address limb loss based on genes like Sp transcription factors conserved across multiple contexts of appendage regeneration.","dates":{"publication":"2026/04/06"},"accession":"GSE309792","cross_references":{"GSM":["GSM9282295","GSM9282296","GSM9282294","GSM9282297"],"GPL":["28330"],"GSE":["309792"],"taxon":["Mus musculus"]}}