- Bok, Seoyeon;
- Yallowitz, Alisha;
- Sun, Jun;
- McCormick, Jason;
- Cung, Michelle;
- Hu, Lingling;
- Lalani, Sarfaraz;
- Li, Zan;
- Sosa, Branden;
- Baumgartner, Tomas;
- Byrne, Paul;
- Zhang, Tuo;
- Morse, Kyle;
- Mohamed, Fatma;
- Ge, Chunxi;
- Franceschi, Renny;
- Cowling, Randy;
- Greenberg, Barry;
- Pisapia, David;
- Imahiyerobo, Thomas;
- Lakhani, Shenela;
- Ross, M;
- Hoffman, Caitlin;
- Debnath, Shawon;
- Greenblatt, Matthew
Craniosynostosis is a group of disorders of premature calvarial suture fusion. The identity of the calvarial stem cells (CSCs) that produce fusion-driving osteoblasts in craniosynostosis remains poorly understood. Here we show that both physiologic calvarial mineralization and pathologic calvarial fusion in craniosynostosis reflect the interaction of two separate stem cell lineages; a previously identified cathepsin K (CTSK) lineage CSC1 (CTSK+ CSC) and a separate discoidin domain-containing receptor 2 (DDR2) lineage stem cell (DDR2+ CSC) that we identified in this study. Deletion of Twist1, a gene associated with craniosynostosis in humans2,3, solely in CTSK+ CSCs is sufficient to drive craniosynostosis in mice, but the sites that are destined to fuse exhibit an unexpected depletion of CTSK+ CSCs and a corresponding expansion of DDR2+ CSCs, with DDR2+ CSC expansion being a direct maladaptive response to CTSK+ CSC depletion. DDR2+ CSCs display full stemness features, and our results establish the presence of two distinct stem cell lineages in the sutures, with both populations contributing to physiologic calvarial mineralization. DDR2+ CSCs mediate a distinct form of endochondral ossification without the typical haematopoietic marrow formation. Implantation of DDR2+ CSCs into suture sites is sufficient to induce fusion, and this phenotype was prevented by co-transplantation of CTSK+ CSCs. Finally, the human counterparts of DDR2+ CSCs and CTSK+ CSCs display conserved functional properties in xenograft assays. The interaction between these two stem cell populations provides a new biologic interface for the modulation of calvarial mineralization and suture patency.