High resolution multi-scale profiling of embryonic germ cell-like cells derivation reveals pluripotent state transitions in humans

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Abstract

Primordial germ cells (PGCs) are the embryonic precursors of the gametes. In mice and rats, PGCs can readily acquire pluripotency in vitro by forming embryonic germ cells (EGCs). To date, a comparable in vitro system has not been established in humans, despite the fact that human PGCs (hPGCs) readily undergo pluripotent conversion in the context of germ cell tumorigenesis. Here we report that hPGC-like cells (hPGCLCs) undergo conversion to human embryonic germ-like cells (hEGCLCs) upon exposure to the same inductive signals previously used to derive mouse EGCs. This defined, feeder-free culture system allows efficient derivation of human EGCLCs which can be expanded and maintained in standard human pluripotent stem cell medium. hEGCLCs are transcriptionally similar to human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) and can differentiate into all three germ layers, as well as giving rise to PGCLCs once more - demonstrating the interconvertibility of pluripotent states. This is also evident at the epigenetic level, as the initial DNA demethylation that occurs in hPGCLCs is largely reversed in hEGCLCs, restoring DNA methylation to the level observed in hPSCs. This new in vitro model captures the transition from the pluripotent stem cell state to a germ cell identity and back again, and therefore represents a highly tractable system to study pluripotent and epigenetic transitions, including those which occur during human germ cell tumorigenesis.

In brief

We report the first fully defined system to efficiently convert hPGCLCs to a pluripotent stem cell (PSC) state. We tracked pluripotent state transitions by multi-omic analysis and provided a high-resolution map of the transcriptional and epigenomic transitions upon entry to and exit from the human germline.

Highlights

  • Efficient derivation of hEGCLC in fully defined feeder-free conditions

  • Single-cell transcriptomic profiling of transitions from the hPSC state to hPGCLCs and back.

  • Longitudinal DNA methylation profiling highlights the overall reversibility of epigenetic states

  • Multi-omic gene regulatory network analysis identifies key regulators of pluripotent transitions

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