Abstract

Here, we used single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), single-cell ATAC sequencing (scATAC-seq), and single-cell spatial transcriptomics to characterize murine cortical OPCs throughout postnatal life. During development, we identified two groups of differentially localized PDGFRα+ OPCs that are transcriptionally and epigenetically distinct. One group (active, or actOPCs) is metabolically active and enriched in white matter. The second (homeostatic, or hOPCs) is less active, enriched in gray matter, and predicted to derive from actOPCs. In adulthood, these two groups are transcriptionally but not epigenetically distinct, and relative to developing OPCs are less active metabolically and have less open chromatin. When adult oligodendrogenesis is enhanced during experimentally induced remyelination, adult OPCs do not reacquire a developmental open chromatin state, and the oligodendrogenesis trajectory is distinct from that seen neonatally. These data suggest that there are two OPC groups subserving distinct postnatal functions and that neonatal and adult OPC-mediated oligodendrogenesis are fundamentally different.

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