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DOI: 10.1038/nature13173
¤ OpenAccess: Green
This work has “Green” OA status. This means it may cost money to access on the publisher landing page, but there is a free copy in an OA repository.

Reconstructing lineage hierarchies of the distal lung epithelium using single-cell RNA-seq

Barbara Treutlein,Douglas Brownfield,Angela Ruohao Wu,Norma Neff,Gary L. Mantalas,F. Hernán Espinoza,Tushar Desai,Mark A. Krasnow,Stephen R. Quake

Transcriptome
Biology
Progenitor cell
2014
Single-cell transcriptome analysis enables the direct measurement of cell types and lineage hierarchies of the developing distal lung epithelium and identifies a population of bipotential alveolar progenitor cells. Stephen Quake and colleagues have used a new microfluidic single-cell RNA- sequencing method to examine the cellular heterogeneity in the developing mouse lung. Using this approach they identify potential new markers for both alveolar type 1 (AT1) cells, specialized for gas exchange, and surfactant-secreting cuboidal AT2 cells. The techniques used here could be applied to any developing or mature tissue, so it could be useful for the identification of cell types, progenitors and lineage-specific regulatory factors. The mammalian lung is a highly branched network in which the distal regions of the bronchial tree transform during development into a densely packed honeycomb of alveolar air sacs that mediate gas exchange. Although this transformation has been studied by marker expression analysis and fate-mapping, the mechanisms that control the progression of lung progenitors along distinct lineages into mature alveolar cell types are still incompletely known, in part because of the limited number of lineage markers1,2,3 and the effects of ensemble averaging in conventional transcriptome analysis experiments on cell populations1,2,3,4,5. Here we show that single-cell transcriptome analysis circumvents these problems and enables direct measurement of the various cell types and hierarchies in the developing lung. We used microfluidic single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) on 198 individual cells at four different stages encompassing alveolar differentiation to measure the transcriptional states which define the developmental and cellular hierarchy of the distal mouse lung epithelium. We empirically classified cells into distinct groups by using an unbiased genome-wide approach that did not require a priori knowledge of the underlying cell types or the previous purification of cell populations. The results confirmed the basic outlines of the classical model of epithelial cell-type diversity in the distal lung and led to the discovery of many previously unknown cell-type markers, including transcriptional regulators that discriminate between the different populations. We reconstructed the molecular steps during maturation of bipotential progenitors along both alveolar lineages and elucidated the full life cycle of the alveolar type 2 cell lineage. This single-cell genomics approach is applicable to any developing or mature tissue to robustly delineate molecularly distinct cell types, define progenitors and lineage hierarchies, and identify lineage-specific regulatory factors.
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    Reconstructing lineage hierarchies of the distal lung epithelium using single-cell RNA-seq” is a paper by Barbara Treutlein Douglas Brownfield Angela Ruohao Wu Norma Neff Gary L. Mantalas F. Hernán Espinoza Tushar Desai Mark A. Krasnow Stephen R. Quake published in 2014. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.