TY - JOUR
T1 - A molecular cell atlas of mouse lemur, an emerging model primate
AU - The Tabula Microcebus Consortium
AU - Lalgudi, Pranav V.
AU - Vemuri, Venkata N.P.
AU - McGeever, Erin
AU - Awayan, Kyle
AU - Agarwal, Snigdha
AU - Wang, Sheng
AU - Koh, Winston
AU - Yang, Jinxurong
AU - Stanley, Geoff
AU - Antony, Jane
AU - Jing, Qiuyu
AU - Parham, Peter
AU - Guethlein, Lisbeth A.
AU - Salzman, Julia
AU - Olivieri, Julia
AU - Dehghannasiri, Roozbeh
AU - Wang, Michael F.Z.
AU - Li, Zhengda
AU - Nafees, Saba
AU - Tan, Weilun
AU - Webber, James
AU - Yu, Brian
AU - Huynh, Shelly
AU - Agrawal, Aditi
AU - Yan, Jia
AU - Crasta, Sheela
AU - Darmanis, Spyros
AU - Jones, Robert C.
AU - Wu, Timothy Ting Hsuan
AU - Baruni, Jalal
AU - Ouadah, Youcef
AU - Tan, Michelle
AU - Maynard, Ashley
AU - Israel, Carly
AU - Kong, William
AU - Baghel, Ankit
AU - Lu, Wan Jin
AU - Boyd, Scott D.
AU - Frank, Hannah K.
AU - Lee, Song Eun
AU - Sivakamasundari,
AU - Huang, Franklin W.
AU - Allegakoen, Paul
AU - Weinstein, Hannah N.W.
AU - Kim, Seung K.
AU - Hang, Yan
AU - Chang, Charles A.
AU - Neuhöfer, Patrick
AU - Huang, Kerwyn C.
AU - Ming, Jingsi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/8/7
Y1 - 2025/8/7
N2 - Mouse lemurs are the smallest and fastest reproducing primates, as well as one of the most abundant, and they are emerging as a model organism for primate biology, behaviour, health and conservation. Although much has been learnt about their ecology and phylogeny in Madagascar and their physiology, little is known about their cellular and molecular biology. Here we used droplet-based and plate-based single-cell RNA sequencing to create Tabula Microcebus, a transcriptomic atlas of 226,000 cells from 27 mouse lemur organs opportunistically obtained from four donors clinically and histologically characterized. Using computational cell clustering, integration and expert cell annotation, we define and biologically organize more than 750 lemur molecular cell types and their full gene expression profiles. This includes cognates of most classical human cell types, including stem and progenitor cells, and differentiating cells along the developmental trajectories of spermatogenesis, haematopoiesis and other adult tissues. We also describe dozens of previously unidentified or sparsely characterized cell types. We globally compare expression profiles to define the molecular relationships of cell types across the body, and explore primate cell and gene expression evolution by comparing lemur transcriptomes to those of human, mouse and macaque. This reveals cell-type-specific patterns of primate specialization and many cell types and genes for which the mouse lemur provides a better human model than mouse1. The atlas provides a cellular and molecular foundation for studying this model primate and establishes a general approach for characterizing other emerging model organisms.
AB - Mouse lemurs are the smallest and fastest reproducing primates, as well as one of the most abundant, and they are emerging as a model organism for primate biology, behaviour, health and conservation. Although much has been learnt about their ecology and phylogeny in Madagascar and their physiology, little is known about their cellular and molecular biology. Here we used droplet-based and plate-based single-cell RNA sequencing to create Tabula Microcebus, a transcriptomic atlas of 226,000 cells from 27 mouse lemur organs opportunistically obtained from four donors clinically and histologically characterized. Using computational cell clustering, integration and expert cell annotation, we define and biologically organize more than 750 lemur molecular cell types and their full gene expression profiles. This includes cognates of most classical human cell types, including stem and progenitor cells, and differentiating cells along the developmental trajectories of spermatogenesis, haematopoiesis and other adult tissues. We also describe dozens of previously unidentified or sparsely characterized cell types. We globally compare expression profiles to define the molecular relationships of cell types across the body, and explore primate cell and gene expression evolution by comparing lemur transcriptomes to those of human, mouse and macaque. This reveals cell-type-specific patterns of primate specialization and many cell types and genes for which the mouse lemur provides a better human model than mouse1. The atlas provides a cellular and molecular foundation for studying this model primate and establishes a general approach for characterizing other emerging model organisms.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105013156834
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-025-09113-9
DO - 10.1038/s41586-025-09113-9
M3 - 文章
C2 - 40739356
AN - SCOPUS:105013156834
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 644
SP - 173
EP - 184
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 8075
ER -