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A vertebral skeletal stem cell lineage driving metastasis.

Authors :
Sun, Jun
Hu, Lingling
Bok, Seoyeon
Yallowitz, Alisha R.
Cung, Michelle
McCormick, Jason
Zheng, Ling J.
Debnath, Shawon
Niu, Yuzhe
Tan, Adrian Y.
Lalani, Sarfaraz
Morse, Kyle W.
Shinn, Daniel
Pajak, Anthony
Hammad, Mohammed
Suhardi, Vincentius Jeremy
Li, Zan
Li, Na
Wang, Lijun
Zou, Weiguo
Source :
Nature; Sep2023, Vol. 621 Issue 7979, p602-609, 8p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Vertebral bone is subject to a distinct set of disease processes from long bones, including a much higher rate of solid tumour metastases1–4. The basis for this distinct biology of vertebral bone has so far remained unknown. Here we identify a vertebral skeletal stem cell (vSSC) that co-expresses ZIC1 and PAX1 together with additional cell surface markers. vSSCs display formal evidence of stemness, including self-renewal, label retention and sitting at the apex of their differentiation hierarchy. vSSCs are physiologic mediators of vertebral bone formation, as genetic blockade of the ability of vSSCs to generate osteoblasts results in defects in the vertebral neural arch and body. Human counterparts of vSSCs can be identified in vertebral endplate specimens and display a conserved differentiation hierarchy and stemness features. Multiple lines of evidence indicate that vSSCs contribute to the high rates of vertebral metastatic tropism observed in breast cancer, owing in part to increased secretion of the novel metastatic trophic factor MFGE8. Together, our results indicate that vSSCs are distinct from other skeletal stem cells and mediate the unique physiology and pathology of vertebrae, including contributing to the high rate of vertebral metastasis.Vertebral osteoblasts in mouse and human are formed from a precursor skeletal stem cell population that is distinct from long bone skeletal stem cells in function, location and transcriptional programme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
621
Issue :
7979
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172296249
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06519-1