Abstract
Grafts of spinal-cord-derived neural progenitor cells (NPCs) enable the robust regeneration of corticospinal axons and restore forelimb function after spinal cord injury1; however, the molecular mechanisms that underlie this regeneration are unknown. Here we perform translational profiling specifically of corticospinal tract (CST) motor neurons in mice, to identify their ‘regenerative transcriptome’ after spinal cord injury and NPC grafting. Notably, both injury alone and injury combined with NPC grafts elicit virtually identical early transcriptomic responses in host CST neurons. However, in mice with injury alone this regenerative transcriptome is downregulated after two weeks, whereas in NPC-grafted mice this transcriptome is sustained. The regenerative transcriptome represents a reversion to an embryonic transcriptional state of the CST neuron. The huntingtin gene (Htt) is a central hub in the regeneration transcriptome; deletion of Htt significantly attenuates regeneration, which shows that Htt has a key role in neural plasticity after injury.
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Data availability
RNA-seq data have been deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) repository (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo), accession number GSE126957.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G. Adelson Medical Research Foundation, the Veterans Administration (The Gordon Mansfield Consortium for Spinal Cord Regeneration), the NIH (NS09881 and EB014986) and the Gerbic Family Foundation. We acknowledge the support of the NINDS Informatics Center for Neurogenetics and Neurogenomics (P30 NS062691 to G.C.). We appreciate the assistance of J. Dulin.
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Contributions
G.H.D.P. and M.H.T. conceptualized the study; G.H.D.P., R.K., G.C. and M.H.T. performed analysis of transcriptomic data; G.H.D.P., P.C. and R.L. performed data validation; G.H.D.P., R.L., N.M. and P.C. performed formal analysis; G.H.D.P., R.L., N.M., P.C., E.V.N. and J.M.M. performed investigation; G.H.D.P., N.M., P.C. and R.L. performed experiments and analysis for Fig.1; G.H.D.P., R.K. and G.C. performed experiments and data analysis and validation for Fig. 2, Extended Data Figs. 2, 6, 7; E.V.N. and J.M.M. performed experiments and analysis for Fig. 3; P.L. performed experiments for Extended Data Fig. 1; G.H.D.P. performed analysis for Extended Data Fig. 3; G.H.D.P. performed experiments and analysis for Extended Data Fig. 5; G.H.D.P. performed experiment and analysis for Extended Data Fig. 7; I.D., B.Z., G.C. and M.H.T. provided materials used for experiments; G.H.D.P., R.K. and G.C. performed data curation; G.H.D.P. and M.H.T. wrote the original draft; G.H.D.P., M.H.T., R.K. and G.C. reviewed and edited the manuscript.
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Extended data figures and tables
Extended Data Fig. 1 TRAP of regenerating corticospinal neurons.
a, b, Coronal cortical section of transgenic BAC–TRAP mice expressing eGFP–L10A under the Glt25d2 promoter primarily in neurons (NeuN) of cortical layer 5b. b, Confocal z-stack projection of 15-μm thickness showing colocalization of eGFP–L10A and NeuN within pyramidal neurons. c, d, Retrogradely labelled CST neurons (CTB) projecting to the cervical spinal cord (C4–C8) grey matter colabel with eGFP–L10A, indicating that about 50% of TRAPed mRNA molecules are derived from corticospinal neurons. d, Confocal z-stack projection of 10-μm thickness showing colocalization of eGFP–L10A and CTB within pyramidal neurons. n = 3 biological replicates, which showed comparable results. e, Experimental timeline for purification of TRAPed mRNA molecules exclusively from cortical-layer-5 neurons.
Extended Data Fig. 2 Sample Pearson correlation identifies unique populations of mRNAs derived from CST neurons (TRAPed samples) and from whole motor cortex (unbound samples) after TRAP.
mRNA species from all conditions are more similar to each other (TRAPed samples) than total RNA collected from the motor cortex (unbound samples), indicating that TRAP enriched for a uniquely defined mRNA population that is distinct from whole cortex samples. Samples are arranged by hierarchical clustering.
Extended Data Fig. 3 In situ hybridization data from the Allen Mouse Brain Atlas confirms layer-5b-specific mRNA expression of genes highly enriched by TRAP from intact Glt25d2-eGFP-L10a mice.
a, Fold change of most highly enriched mRNA transcripts in the corticospinal cell population (TRAPed samples) compared to mRNA from whole motor cortex (unbound samples) in the intact state. n = 3 biological replicates per condition. b, In situ hybridization (ISH) data (Allen Mouse Brain Atlas; https://mouse.brain-map.org/) of most highly enriched genes (from a) confirms cell-type-specific enrichment of TRAPed mRNA expression in layer-5b neurons of the adult mouse motor cortex.
Extended Data Fig. 4 Neuronal genes are enriched in the TRAPed samples from layer-5b neurons.
a, Neuronal marker genes are enriched in the TRAPed samples derived from layer-5b neurons. b, Astrocyte- and oligodendrocyte-specific markers are expressed at a higher level in the whole motor cortex (unbound samples). n = 3 biological replicates per condition. Data are mean ± s.d.
Extended Data Fig. 5 Verification of RNA-seq data via immunolabelling for ATG7, SOX9 and PAX2.
Immunohistological staining of selected proteins in layer 5b of the motor cortex of Glt25d2-eGFP-L10a transgenic mice. a, b, eGFP–L10A staining is shown in green and SOX9 staining is shown in red in intact mice (a) or in regenerating CST 10 days after injury with E12 NPC graft (b). c, Sox9 mRNA expression after TRAP and RNA-seq. Data are normalized to those from intact mice. ****P = 3.2 × 10−7, two-tailed t-test. d, e, eGFP–L10A staining is shown in green and PAX2 staining is shown in red in intact mice (d) or in regenerating CST 10 days after injury with E12 NPC graft (e). f, Pax2 mRNA expression after TRAP and RNA-seq. Data are normalized to those from intact mice. **P = 0.0057, two-tailed t-test. g, h, eGFP–L10A staining is shown in green and ATG7 staining is shown in red in intact mice (g) or in regenerating CST 10 days after injury with E12 NPC graft (h). i, Atg7 mRNA expression after TRAP and RNA-seq. Data are normalized to those from intact mice. ****P = 3.0 × 10−6, two-tailed t-test. n = 3 biological replicates per condition. Data are mean ± s.d.
Extended Data Fig. 6 Heat map of the top 1,000 significantly differentially regulated transcripts (FDR < 0.1) upon injury and upon regeneration, relative to intact mice, with individual gene names.
Heat map of the top 1,000 significantly differentially regulated transcripts (FDR < 0.1, Benjamini–Hochberg, two-sided) upon injury and upon regeneration, relative to the intact state. Red, increased expression; green, reduced expression. The intensity of the colour reflects the degree of gene regulation compared to the intact state. Transcripts are arranged by hierarchical clustering. n = 2 biological replicates for day-10 non-regenerating, and n = 3 biological replicates for all other conditions. Genes are listed from top to bottom. Black and grey boxes next to heat map indicate gene lists (columns 1 to 7 from left to right).
Extended Data Fig. 7 Heat map of genes enriched in the Gene Ontology analysis (Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software).
Heat map of Gene Ontology (GO)-term-associated significantly differentially regulated transcripts (FDR < 0.1, Benjamini–Hochberg, two-sided) upon injury and upon regeneration, relative to the intact state, at 10, 14 and 21 days after injury. Red, increased expression; green, reduced expression. The intensity of the colour reflects the degree of gene regulation compared to the intact state. Transcripts are arranged by GO-term clustering (Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software). GO clusters listed on the right are indicated via colour code on the left side of the heat map. Many common genes have increased in expression in both non-regenerating and regenerating groups 10 days after injury. However, by day 14, these injury-induced changes are diminishing in the absence of a graft but are sustained in the presence of a graft, into which regeneration occurs. By day 21 after injury, many genes have returned to baseline levels in non-regenerating CST neurons, whereas they remain highly upregulated in regenerating CST neurons. The GO categories are derived from Figs. 2, 3. n = 2 biological replicates for day-10 non-regenerating, and n = 3 biological replicates for all other conditions.
Extended Data Fig. 8 The regeneration gene-expression profile is sustained at 21 days only with an NPC graft, and not with a non-stimulatory MSC graft, and correlates with neuronal developmental transcriptomes.
a, Number of significantly differentially expressed genes of non-regenerating (no graft and MSC graft) and regenerating (NPC graft) CST neurons relative to intact CST neurons (FDR < 0.1, Benjamini–Hochberg, two-sided) at 21 days after injury. Red, increased expression; green, reduced expression. b, Heat map of the top 1,000 significantly differentially regulated transcripts (FDR < 0.1) upon injury and upon regeneration, relative to the intact state, at 21 days after injury. Red, increased expression; green, reduced expression. The intensity of the colour reflects the degree of gene regulation compared to the intact state. Transcripts are arranged by hierarchical clustering. The non-regenerating conditions (no graft and MSC graft) show gene-expression patterns similar to one another; and, in both cases, gene expression is not sustained in comparison to the regenerating condition (NPC graft). n = 3 biological replicates. c, Differentially expressed genes (FDR < 0.1) of a previous neuronal development study (GSE2039) for different time points against P14 (log-transformed fold change) was compared to CST data against the intact condition. Numbers indicate the Pearson correlation coefficient of the two datasets. Colour indicates the magnitude of the correlation coefficient (side bar). Values in parentheses are statistical significance (P values) of the correlation coefficients. n = 2 biological replicates for day-10 non-regenerating and n = 3 biological replicates for all other conditions. d–f, Overlapping signalling pathways of regenerating versus non-regenerating CST neurons (FDR < 0.1) using Ingenuity Pathway Analysis software at 10 (d), 14 (e) and 21 (f) days after injury. The network of overlapping signalling pathways shows each pathway as a single ‘node’ that is coloured proportionally to the right-tailed Fisher’s exact test P value; darker red, more significant. Individual scaling of P values is listed at the bottom of each graph. A line connects any two pathways when there is at least one dataset molecule in common between them. Pathways of similar function are clustered together (dashed blue outlines). n = 2 biological replicates for day-10 non-regenerating and n = 3 biological replicates for all other conditions.
Extended Data Fig. 9 AAV8-tdTomato-Cre expression completely abolishes detection of HTT protein six weeks after injection.
AAV8-dependent Cre delivery to Httflox/flox mice was used to conditionally knock out HTT expression in corticospinal neurons six weeks before injury. a–c, Low magnification of right motor cortex six weeks after AAV8-tdTomato-Cre injection indicates successful tdTomato (red) expression in motor cortex and reduction in HTT protein (black or blue) in the infected area. d, e, High-magnification images showing cortical neurons with baseline HTT protein expression outside of infected areas (d) and after HTT deletion in cortical neurons that are transfected with AAV8-tdTomato-Cre (e). f, AAV8-tdTomato-Cre-infected cortical neurons co-express tdTomato (red) and Cre (green). n = 3 biological replicates, with comparable outcomes.
Extended Data Fig. 10 Lesioned corticospinal axons do not regenerate in the absence of an NPC graft.
a, CST axons labelled with the anterograde axonal tracer BDA do not regenerate in the absence of a growth-stimulating NPC graft. The GFAP label indicates glial activation around the lesion site. b, However, CST axons in mice without grafts do sprout into spared host grey matter underlying the lesion, consistent with previous reports46,47,48. In the box plot, centre line is the median, box extends from the 25th to the 75th percentile and whiskers denote minimum–maximum values. n = 8 biological replicates. **P = 0.0027, two-tailed, non-paired t-test.
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Supplementary Information
This file contains Supplementary Tables 1-4 and Supplementary Item 1 - Selective Enrichment of Corticospinal Neuronal Genes in Sampled BacTRAP Animals.
Supplementary Table 5
Complete dataset of significantly differentially expressed genes (FDR < 0.1) at day 10, 14 and 21 (logFC and p-values).
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Poplawski, G.H.D., Kawaguchi, R., Van Niekerk, E. et al. Injured adult neurons regress to an embryonic transcriptional growth state. Nature 581, 77–82 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2200-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2200-5
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