Cell-type, single-cell, and spatial signatures of brain-region specific splicing in postnatal development

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Cell-type, single-cell, and spatial signatures of brain-region specific splicing in postnatal development
المؤلفون: Andrey D Przhibelskiy, Toby Hunt, Adam Frankish, Man Ying Wong, Geoffrey S. Pitt, Jennifer Chew, Hagen Tilgner, Davide Risso, Alexander N. Stein, Olivier Fedrigo, Paul Flicek, Ahmed Mahfouz, Steven A. Sloan, Zachary Bent, August B. Smit, Paul Collier, Jordan Marrocco, Wenjie Luo, Erich D. Jarvis, Anoushka Joglekar, Margaret Elizabeth Ross, Susan Lin, Anna Katharina Schlusche, Neil I. Weisenfeld, Simon A. Hardwick, Bettina Haase, Ashley Hayes, Stephen R. Williams
بيانات النشر: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.
سنة النشر: 2020
مصطلحات موضوعية: Gene isoform, Transcriptome, Exon, Cell type, medicine.anatomical_structure, Cell, Alternative splicing, RNA splicing, medicine, Computational biology, Biology, Gene
الوصف: Alternative RNA splicing varies across brain regions, but the single-cell resolution of such regional variation is unknown. Here we present the first single-cell investigation of differential isoform expression (DIE) between brain regions, by performing single cell long-read transcriptome sequencing in the mouse hippocampus and prefrontal cortex in 45 cell types at postnatal day 7 (www.isoformAtlas.com). Using isoform tests for brain-region specific DIE, which outperform exon-based tests, we detect hundreds of brain-region specific DIE events traceable to specific cell-types. Many DIE events correspond to functionally distinct protein isoforms, some with just a 6-nucleotide exon variant. In most instances, one cell type is responsible for brain-region specific DIE. Cell types indigenous to only one anatomic structure display distinctive DIE, where for example, the choroid plexus epithelium manifest unique transcription start sites. However, for some genes, multiple cell-types are responsible for DIE in bulk data, indicating that regional identity can, although less frequently, override cell-type specificity. We validated our findings with spatial transcriptomics and long-read sequencing, yielding the first spatially resolved splicing map in the postnatal mouse brain (www.isoformAtlas.com). Our methods are highly generalizable. They provide a robust means of quantifying isoform expression with cell-type and spatial resolution, and reveal how the brain integrates molecular and cellular complexity to serve function.
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::df6904daaf05fc689f9034be5f89e11f
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.08.27.268730
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi...........df6904daaf05fc689f9034be5f89e11f
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE