Abstract

Vascularization is critical for skull development, maintenance, and healing. Yet, there remains a significant knowledge gap in the relationship of blood vessels to cranial skeletal progenitors during these processes. Here, we introduce a quantitative 3D imaging platform to enable the visualization and analysis of high-resolution data sets (>100 GB) throughout the entire murine calvarium. Using this technique, we provide single-cell resolution 3D maps of vessel phenotypes and skeletal progenitors in the frontoparietal cranial bones. Through these high-resolution data sets, we demonstrate that CD31hiEmcnhi vessels are spatially correlated with both Osterix+ and Gli1+ skeletal progenitors during postnatal growth, healing, and stimulated remodeling, and are concentrated at transcortical canals and osteogenic fronts. Interestingly, we find that this relationship is weakened in mice with a conditional knockout of PDGF-BB in TRAP+ osteoclasts, suggesting a potential role for osteoclasts in maintaining the native cranial microvascular environment. Our findings provide a foundational framework for understanding how blood vessels and skeletal progenitors spatially interact in cranial bone, and will enable more targeted studies into the mechanisms of skull disease pathologies and treatments. Additionally, our technique can be readily adapted to study numerous cell types and investigate other elusive phenomena in cranial bone biology.

Highlights

  • Vascularization is critical for skull development, maintenance, and healing

  • Our findings provide a foundational framework that will progress our knowledge of craniofacial bone biology and inform the development of therapies to treat skull abnormalities and injuries

  • To visualize vessel phenotypes and skeletal progenitors in the murine calvarium, we developed and optimized an imaging pipeline comprised of whole-mount immunostaining, optical tissue clearing, and light-sheet imaging (Supplementary Fig. 1a)

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Summary

Introduction

Vascularization is critical for skull development, maintenance, and healing. Yet, there remains a significant knowledge gap in the relationship of blood vessels to cranial skeletal progenitors during these processes. We generated high-resolution 3D maps of vessel phenotypes, Osterix+ skeletal progenitors, and Gli1+ skeletal progenitors in the parietal and posterior frontal bones of juvenile 4-weeks-old mice. We compared the calvaria of juvenile (4-weeks-old) and adult (12-weeks-old) mice to determine how vessel phenotype and skeletal progenitor distribution change following postnatal growth.

Results
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