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Marsupial single-cell transcriptomics identifies temporal diversity in mammalian developmental programs.

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posted on 2025-12-04, 10:33 authored by Sergio Menchero, Christopher Barrington, Clare Critcher, Wazeer Varsally, Gregorio Alanis-Lobato, Kathy K Niakan, James MA Turner
Single-cell transcriptomics has demonstrated conserved and divergent programs of organogenesis in mammals, but existing studies have focused on eutherians. Marsupials exhibit short gestation and complete development externally, necessitating accelerated differentiation of anterior features required for locomotion and feeding. Hence, they represent a unique outgroup for studying temporal shifts in development, known as heterochrony. Here, we generate a single-cell transcriptomic atlas of gastrulation and early organogenesis in a marsupial, the opossum Monodelphis domestica. We identify previously undocumented tissues undergoing heterochrony and find that transcriptional programs that form anterior structures initiate earlier and progress faster relative to eutherians. The result is uncoupling of transcriptional and morphological timelines, revealing unforeseen diversity in mammalian developmental sequences. Using our transcriptomic dataset, we identified translation as a candidate control mechanism by which anterior prioritization is achieved. Our findings provide insight into the asynchronous progression of developmental programs in marsupials.

Funding

Cancer Research UK (Grant ID: FC001120) Human Frontier Science Program (Grant ID: LT000293/2020-L2) Cancer Research UK (Grant ID: CC2052) Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 222535/Z/21/Z) The Francis Crick Institute Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 221856/Z/20/Z) Medical Research Council (Grant ID: FC00120) Human Frontier Science Program Crick (Grant ID: CC2052, Grant title: Turner CC2052) Wellcome Trust (Grant ID: 222535/Z/21/Z, Grant title: WT 222535/Z/21/Z) Crick (Grant ID: CC1107, Grant title: STP Bioinformatics & Biostatistics) Crick (Grant ID: CC2074, Grant title: Niakan CC2074)

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