Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Enteric nervous system (ENS) development requires migration, proliferation, and differentiation of progenitors for normal gastrointestinal (GI) motility. Sox10 deficit causes aganglionosis, modeling Hirschsprung disease (HSCR), and disrupts ratios of postnatal enteric neurons in proximal ganglionated bowel. How Sox10 deficiency alters enteric neuron ratios is unclear. Sox10's prominent expression in enteric neural crest-derived progenitors (ENCPs) and lack of this gene in mature enteric neurons led us to examine Sox10(Dom) effects in early ENS development. METHODS: Immunohistochemistry localized SOX10 in the developing ENS relative to HuC/D. ENS progenitors, developing neurons, and enteric glia were isolated from Sox10(+/+) and Sox10(Dom/+) littermates for single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq). scRNA-seq data was processed to identify cell type-specific markers, differentially expressed genes, cell fate trajectories, and gene regulatory network activity between genotypes. Hybridization chain reaction (HCR) coupled with immunohistochemistry validated expression changes. RESULTS: SOX10 protein was detected in early ENS neurons. scRNA-seq profiles detected three neuronal trajectories emerging via two transition pathways accompanied by elevated activity of Hox gene regulatory networks (GRN). Sox10(Dom/+) scRNA-seq profiles exhibited a novel progenitor cluster, reduced numbers of cells in transitional states, and shifts in cell abundance between neuronal trajectories. Hoxa6 was differentially expressed in the neuronal trajectories impacted in Sox10(Dom/+) mutants, and HCR identified altered Hoxa6 expression in early developing neurons of Sox10(Dom/+) ENS. CONCLUSIONS: Sox10(Dom/+) mutation shifts enteric neuron types by altering neuronal trajectories early in ENS development. Multiple neurogenic transcription factors are reduced in Sox10(Dom/+) scRNA-seq profiles. This work is the first to correlate changes in Hox expression, notably Hoxa6, with alterations in enteric neuron trajectories.