Stem cell specification and niche formation in developing incisor require actomyosin forces
Yasmin Mohtadi Hamadani, Laura Evers, Satu-Marja Myllymäki, Emma Juuri, Maria Jussila, Paul Gueguen, Mina Mina, Irma Thesleff, Anamaria Balic

TL;DR
This study shows that actomyosin forces help maintain stem cells in the developing mouse incisor before the niche is fully formed.
Contribution
The study reveals that actomyosin contractile tension is crucial for stem cell confinement and niche formation in incisor development.
Findings
A Sox2-expressing stem cell-like population exists before niche formation in the incisor.
Actomyosin contractile tension confines Sox2+ stem cells to the leading edge of the epithelium.
Disrupting actomyosin leads to premature differentiation and impaired niche formation.
Abstract
The precise timing of stem cell specification and niche formation during murine incisor development is poorly understood, and it is unclear whether these processes occur simultaneously or in a sequential manner. Functional dental epithelial stem cells are marked by the expression of Sox2, a transcription factor that is broadly expressed in the dental epithelium at the dentition onset and restricted to stem cells in fully developed incisor. Using genetic lineage tracing in Sox2CreERT2/+; R26RmT/mG and Sox2CreERT2/+; R26RtdT/+ embryos along with a single-cell RNA sequencing at different stages of incisor development, we investigated the timing of the stem cell specification and its temporal relationship with niche formation. Our results reveal the presence of a Sox2-expressing stem cell-like population prior to formation of the functional niche. These cells localize to the leading edge…
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Taxonomy
Topicsdental development and anomalies · Bone and Dental Protein Studies · Oral and Craniofacial Lesions
