Single cell transcriptomics of human epidermis identifies basal stem cell transition states.
Updated October 1, 2022How stem cells give rise to epidermis is unclear despite the crucial role the epidermis plays in barrier and appendage formation. Here we use single cell-RNA sequencing to interrogate basal stem cell heterogeneity of human interfollicular epidermis and find four spatially distinct stem cell populations at the top and bottom of rete ridges and transitional positions between the basal and suprabasal epidermal layers. Cell-cell communication modeling suggests that basal cell populations serve as crucial signaling hubs to maintain epidermal communication. Combining pseudotime, RNA velocity, and cellular entropy analyses point to a hierarchical differentiation lineage supporting multi-stem cell interfollicular epidermal homeostasis models and suggest that transitional basal stem cells are stable states essential for proper stratification. Finally, alterations in differentially expressed transitional basal stem cell genes result in severe thinning of human skin equivalents, validating their essential role in epidermal homeostasis and reinforcing the critical nature of basal stem cell heterogeneity.
Single cell transcriptomics of human epidermis identifies basal stem cell transition states. (Official HCA Publication)
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Atlas
Analysis Portals
NoneProject Label
HumanNeonatalForeskinSpecies
Homo sapiens
Sample Type
specimens
Anatomical Entity
skin of body
Organ Part
skin of prepuce of penis
Selected Cell Types
Unspecified
Disease Status (Specimen)
normal
Disease Status (Donor)
normal
Development Stage
infant stage
Library Construction Method
10x 3' v2
Nucleic Acid Source
single cell
Paired End
falseAnalysis Protocol
analysis_protocolFile Format
Cell Count Estimate
17.6kDonor Count
5