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  4. The Enrichment of Specific Hair Follicle-Associated Cell Populations in Plucked Hairs Offers an Opportunity to Study Gene Expression Underlying Hair Traits
 
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The Enrichment of Specific Hair Follicle-Associated Cell Populations in Plucked Hairs Offers an Opportunity to Study Gene Expression Underlying Hair Traits

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2023
Author
Naboulsi, Rakan
Cieślak, Jakub 
Headon, Denis
Jouni, Ahmad
Negro, Juan J.
Andersson, Göran
Lindgren, Gabriella
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
Journal
International Journal of Molecular Sciences
ISSN
1661-6596
DOI
10.3390/ijms24010561
Web address
https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/24/1/561
Volume
24
Number
1
Pages from-to
art. 561
Abstract (EN)
Gene expression differences can assist in characterizing important underlying genetic mechanisms between different phenotypic traits. However, when population-dense tissues are studied, the signals from scarce populations are diluted. Therefore, appropriately choosing a sample collection method that enriches a particular type of effector cells might yield more specific results. To address this issue, we performed a polyA-selected RNA-seq experiment of domestic horse (Equus ferus caballus) plucked-hair samples and skin biopsies. Then, we layered the horse gene abundance results against cell type-specific marker genes generated from a scRNA-seq supported with spatial mapping of laboratory mouse (Mus musculus) skin to identify the captured populations. The hair-plucking and skin-biopsy sample-collection methods yielded comparable quality and quantity of RNA-seq results. Keratin-related genes, such as KRT84 and KRT75, were among the genes that showed higher abundance in plucked hairs, while genes involved in cellular processes and enzymatic activities, such as MGST1, had higher abundance in skin biopsies. We found an enrichment of hair-follicle keratinocytes in plucked hairs, but detected an enrichment of other populations, including epidermis keratinocytes, in skin biopsies. In mammalian models, biopsies are often the method of choice for a plethora of gene expression studies and to our knowledge, this is a novel study that compares the cell-type enrichment between the non-invasive hair-plucking and the invasive skin-biopsy sample-collection methods. Here, we show that the non-invasive and ethically uncontroversial plucked-hair method is recommended depending on the research question. In conclusion, our study will allow downstream -omics approaches to better understand integumentary conditions in both health and disease in horses as well as other mammals.
Keywords (EN)
  • equine

  • skin

  • hair

  • follicle

  • RNA-seq

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
December 29, 2022
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