Tgfβ signaling stimulates glycolysis to promote the genesis of synovial joint interzone in developing mouse embryonic limbs | Science Advances
Abstract
The initial interzone cells for synovial joints originate from chondrocytes, but such critical transition is minimally understood. With single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of murine embryonic knee joint primordia, we discovered that heightened expression of glycolysis genes characterized developing interzone cells when compared to flanking chondrocytes. Conditional deletion of the glucose transporters
Glut1
and/or
Glut3
, in either the incipient pre-skeletal mesenchyme with
Prx1Cre
or in chondrocytes with
Col2Cre
, disrupted interzone formation dose-dependently. In contrast, deletion of
Glut1
/
3
in established interzone cells with
Gdf5Cre
did not have similar severe disruption of joint development. scRNA-seq revealed that
Glut1/3
deletion by
Prx1Cre
impeded Tgfβ signaling in the developing interzone cells. Direct elimination of Tgfβ signaling with
Prx1Cre
partially phenocopied the deletion of
Glut1/3
in impairing interzone formation. Tgfβ stimulated glycolysis in chondrocytes via activation of mTOR and Hif1α in vitro. The data support that the essential conversion of chondrocytes to interzone cells requires a transient elevation of glycolysis partly dependent on Tgfβ signaling.