Single-nucleus transcriptomics of the prefrontal cortex in major depressive disorder implicates oligodendrocyte precursor cells and excitatory neurons.
T cells provide critical immune surveillance to the central nervous system (CNS), and the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is thought to be a main route for their entry. Further characterization of the state of T cells in the CSF in healthy individuals is important for understanding how T cells provide protective immune surveillance without damaging the delicate environment of the CNS and providing tissue-specific context for understanding immune dysfunction in neuroinflammatory disease. Here, we have profiled T cells in the CSF of healthy human donors and have identified signatures related to cytotoxic capacity and tissue adaptation that are further exemplified in clonally expanded CSF T cells. By comparing profiles of clonally expanded T cells obtained from the CSF of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) and healthy donors, we report that clonally expanded T cells from the CSF of patients with MS have heightened expression of genes related to T cell activation and cytotoxicity.
Characterizing the developmental trajectory of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPC) is of great interest given the importance of these cells in the remyelination process. However, studies of human OPC development remain limited by the availability of whole cell samples and material that encompasses a wide age range, including time of peak myelination. In this study, we apply single cell RNA sequencing to viable whole cells across the age span and link transcriptomic signatures of oligodendrocyte‐lineage cells with stage‐specific functional properties. Cells were isolated from surgical tissue samples of second‐trimester fetal, 2‐year‐old pediatric, 13‐year‐old adolescent, and adult donors by mechanical and enzymatic digestion, followed by percoll gradient centrifugation. Gene expression was analyzed using droplet‐based RNA sequencing (10X Chromium). Louvain clustering analysis identified three distinct cellular subpopulations based on 5,613 genes, comprised of an early OPC (e‐OPC) group, a late OPC group (l‐OPC), and a mature OL (MOL) group. Gene ontology terms enriched for e‐OPCs included cell cycle and development, for l‐OPCs included extracellular matrix and cell adhesion, and for MOLs included myelination and cytoskeleton. The e‐OPCs were mostly confined to the premyelinating fetal group, and the l‐OPCs were most highly represented in the pediatric age group, corresponding to the peak age of myelination. Cells expressing a signature characteristic of l‐OPCs were identified in the adult brain in situ using RNAScope. These findings highlight the transcriptomic variability in OL‐lineage cells before, during, and after peak myelination and contribute to identifying novel pathways required to achieve remyelination.
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