Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy (Mar 2022)

Temporal and spatial cellular and molecular pathological alterations with single-cell resolution in the adult spinal cord after injury

  • Chen Li,
  • Zhourui Wu,
  • Liqiang Zhou,
  • Jingliang Shao,
  • Xiao Hu,
  • Wei Xu,
  • Yilong Ren,
  • Xingfei Zhu,
  • Weihong Ge,
  • Kunshan Zhang,
  • Jiping Liu,
  • Runzhi Huang,
  • Jing Yu,
  • Dandan Luo,
  • Xuejiao Yang,
  • Wenmin Zhu,
  • Rongrong Zhu,
  • Changhong Zheng,
  • Yi Eve Sun,
  • Liming Cheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41392-022-00885-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Spinal cord injury (SCI) involves diverse injury responses in different cell types in a temporally and spatially specific manner. Here, using single-cell transcriptomic analyses combined with classic anatomical, behavioral, electrophysiological analyses, we report, with single-cell resolution, temporal molecular and cellular changes in crush-injured adult mouse spinal cord. Data revealed pathological changes of 12 different major cell types, three of which infiltrated into the spinal cord at distinct times post-injury. We discovered novel microglia and astrocyte subtypes in the uninjured spinal cord, and their dynamic conversions into additional stage-specific subtypes/states. Most dynamic changes occur at 3-days post-injury and by day-14 the second wave of microglial activation emerged, accompanied with changes in various cell types including neurons, indicative of the second round of attacks. By day-38, major cell types are still substantially deviated from uninjured states, demonstrating prolonged alterations. This study provides a comprehensive mapping of cellular/molecular pathological changes along the temporal axis after SCI, which may facilitate the development of novel therapeutic strategies, including those targeting microglia.