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Stem cell-derived synthetic embryos self-assemble by exploiting cadherin codes and cortical tension

Authors :
Min Bao
Jake Cornwall-Scoones
Estefania Sanchez-Vasquez
Andy L. Cox
Dong-Yuan Chen
Joachim De Jonghe
Shahriar Shadkhoo
Florian Hollfelder
Matt Thomson
David M. Glover
Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz
Hollfelder, Florian [0000-0002-1367-6312]
Zernicka-Goetz, Magdalena [0000-0002-7004-2471]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Mammalian embryos sequentially differentiate into trophectoderm and an inner cell mass, the latter of which differentiates into primitive endoderm and epiblast. Trophoblast stem (TS), extraembryonic endoderm (XEN) and embryonic stem (ES) cells derived from these three lineages can self-assemble into synthetic embryos, but the mechanisms remain unknown. Here, we show that a stem cell-specific cadherin code drives synthetic embryogenesis. The XEN cell cadherin code enables XEN cell sorting into a layer below ES cells, recapitulating the sorting of epiblast and primitive endoderm before implantation. The TS cell cadherin code enables TS cell sorting above ES cells, resembling extraembryonic ectoderm clustering above epiblast following implantation. Whereas differential cadherin expression drives initial cell sorting, cortical tension consolidates tissue organization. By optimizing cadherin code expression in different stem cell lines, we tripled the frequency of correctly formed synthetic embryos. Thus, by exploiting cadherin codes from different stages of development, lineage-specific stem cells bypass the preimplantation structure to directly assemble a postimplantation embryo.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1d4aabb5b3f8e584411e9f08cec87715