Cell-specific network analysis of human folliculogenesis reveals network rewiring in antral stage oocytes

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Abstract

Although previous studies have explored the gene expression profiles of human oocytes and granulosa cells by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), the dynamic regulatory network at a single-cell resolution during folliculogenesis remains largely unknown. We identified 10 functional modules by WGCNA, four of which were significantly correlated with primary/antral oocyte and antral/pre-ovulatory granulosa cells. Functional enrichment analysis showed that the brown module, which was correlated with antral oocyte, was enriched in oocyte differentiation, and two core subnetworks identified by MCODE were involved in cell cycle (blue subnetwork) and oogenesis (red subnetwork). The cell-specific network (CSN) analysis demonstrated a distinct gene network structure associated with the antral follicular stage, which was notably different from other developmental stages. To our knowledge, this is the first study to explore gene functions during folliculogenesis at single-cell network level. We uncovered two potential gene subnetworks, which may play an important role in oocyte function beginning at the antral stage, and further established their rewiring process at intra-network/whole transcriptome level. The findings provide crucial insights from a novel network perspective to be further explored in functional mechanistic studies.

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Wang, S., Gong, Y., Wang, Z., Greenbaum, J., Xiao, H. M., & Deng, H. W. (2021). Cell-specific network analysis of human folliculogenesis reveals network rewiring in antral stage oocytes. Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, 25(6), 2851–2860. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.16315

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