Lineage tracing of stem cell-derived dopamine grafts in a Parkinson's model reveals shared origin of all graft-derived cells

Petter Storm, Yu Zhang, Fredrik Nilsson, Alessandro Fiorenzano, Niklas Krausse, Malin Åkerblom, Marcus Davidsson, Joan Yuan, Agnete Kirkeby, Tomas Björklund, Malin Parmar*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Stem cell therapies for Parkinson's disease are at an exciting time of development, and several clinical trials have recently been initiated. Human pluripotent stem cells are differentiated into transplantable dopamine (DA) progenitors which are proliferative at the time of grafting and undergo terminal differentiation and maturation in vivo. While the progenitors are homogeneous at the time of transplantation, they give rise to heterogeneous grafts composed not only of therapeutic DA neurons but also of other mature cell types. The mechanisms for graft diversification are unclear. We used single-nucleus RNA-seq and ATAC-seq to profile DA progenitors before transplantation combined with molecular barcode-based tracing to determine origin and shared lineages of the mature cell types in the grafts. Our data demonstrate that astrocytes, vascular leptomeningeal cells, and DA neurons are the main component of the DAergic grafts, originating from a common progenitor that is tripotent at the time of transplantation.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbereadn3057
JournalScience Advances
Volume10
Issue number42
Number of pages14
ISSN2375-2548
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

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