Litcius/Paper detail

Runx2-Twist1 interaction coordinates cranial neural crest guidance of soft palate myogenesis

Xia Han, Jifan Feng, Tingwei Guo, Yong‐Hwee Eddie Loh, Yuan Yuan, Thach‐Vu Ho, Courtney Kyeong Cho, Jingyuan Li, Junjun Jing, Eva Janečková, Jinzhi He, Fei Pei, Jing Bi, Brian J. Song, Yang Chai

2021eLife44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cranial neural crest (CNC) cells give rise to bone, cartilage, tendons, and ligaments of the vertebrate craniofacial musculoskeletal complex, as well as regulate mesoderm-derived craniofacial muscle development through cell-cell interactions. Using the mouse soft palate as a model, we performed an unbiased single-cell RNA-seq analysis to investigate the heterogeneity and lineage commitment of CNC derivatives during craniofacial muscle development. We show that Runx2, a known osteogenic regulator, is expressed in the CNC-derived perimysial and progenitor populations. Loss of Runx2 in CNC-derivatives results in reduced expression of perimysial markers ( Aldh1a2 and Hic1 ) as well as soft palate muscle defects in Osr2-Cre;Runx2 fl/fl mice. We further reveal that Runx2 maintains perimysial marker expression through suppressing Twist1, and that myogenesis is restored in Osr2-Cre;Runx2 fl/fl ;Twist1 fl/+ mice. Collectively, our findings highlight the roles of Runx2, Twist1, and their interaction in regulating the fate of CNC-derived cells as they guide craniofacial muscle development through cell-cell interactions.

Topics & Concepts

Neural crestCranial neural crestCraniofacialMyogenesisMesodermAnatomyRUNX2BiologyCraniofacial abnormalityProgenitor cellCell biologyCartilageNeuroscienceStem cellEmbryonic stem cellTranscription factorEmbryoGeneticsSkeletal muscleGeneCraniofacial Disorders and Treatmentsdental development and anomaliesCleft Lip and Palate Research