发育中大脑中 Notch 信号的条形码。

IF 3.7 2区 生物学 Q1 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY Development Pub Date : 2024-11-22 DOI:10.1242/dev.203102
Abigail M Siniscalco, Roshan Priyarangana Perera, Jessie E Greenslade, Hemagowri Veeravenkatasubramanian, Aiden Masters, Hannah M Doll, Bushra Raj
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引用次数: 0

摘要

发育信号输入是塑造细胞命运和行为的基础。然而,传统的基于荧光的信号报告在可扩展性和细胞类型的分子分辨率方面存在局限性。我们介绍的 SABER-seq 是一种 CRISPR-Cas 分子记录器,它能将瞬时的发育信号线索作为永久突变储存在细胞基因组中,以便在后期通过单细胞转录组学进行解构。我们应用 SABER-seq 记录了发育中斑马鱼大脑中的 Notch 信号转导。SABER-seq 有两个组件:信号传感器和条形码记录器。传感器通过诱导控制以Notch依赖方式激活Cas9,而记录器则获取Notch活跃的祖细胞中的突变。我们将 SABER-seq 与扩大的幼年大脑图谱相结合,以确定从 Notch 活跃的创始细胞中衍生出来的细胞类型。我们的数据揭示了在终末分化的神经元亚型中检测到祖先细胞中不同 Notch 活性的罕见实例。SABER-seq 是快速、可扩展和高分辨率绘制发育过程中信号活动图谱的新型平台。
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Barcoding Notch signaling in the developing brain.

Developmental signaling inputs are fundamental for shaping cell fates and behavior. However, traditional fluorescent-based signaling reporters have limitations in scalability and molecular resolution of cell types. We present SABER-seq, a CRISPR-Cas molecular recorder that stores transient developmental signaling cues as permanent mutations in cellular genomes for deconstruction at later stages via single-cell transcriptomics. We applied SABER-seq to record Notch signaling in developing zebrafish brains. SABER-seq has two components: a signaling sensor and a barcode recorder. The sensor activates Cas9 in a Notch-dependent manner with inducible control while the recorder obtains mutations in ancestral cells where Notch is active. We combine SABER-seq with an expanded juvenile brain atlas to identify cell types derived from Notch-active founders. Our data reveals rare examples where differential Notch activities in ancestral progenitors are detected in terminally differentiated neuronal subtypes. SABER-seq is a novel platform for rapid, scalable and high-resolution mapping of signaling activity during development.

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来源期刊
Development
Development 生物-发育生物学
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
4.30%
发文量
433
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Development’s scope covers all aspects of plant and animal development, including stem cell biology and regeneration. The single most important criterion for acceptance in Development is scientific excellence. Research papers (articles and reports) should therefore pose and test a significant hypothesis or address a significant question, and should provide novel perspectives that advance our understanding of development. We also encourage submission of papers that use computational methods or mathematical models to obtain significant new insights into developmental biology topics. Manuscripts that are descriptive in nature will be considered only when they lay important groundwork for a field and/or provide novel resources for understanding developmental processes of broad interest to the community. Development includes a Techniques and Resources section for the publication of new methods, datasets, and other types of resources. Papers describing new techniques should include a proof-of-principle demonstration that the technique is valuable to the developmental biology community; they need not include in-depth follow-up analysis. The technique must be described in sufficient detail to be easily replicated by other investigators. Development will also consider protocol-type papers of exceptional interest to the community. We welcome submission of Resource papers, for example those reporting new databases, systems-level datasets, or genetic resources of major value to the developmental biology community. For all papers, the data or resource described must be made available to the community with minimal restrictions upon publication. To aid navigability, Development has dedicated sections of the journal to stem cells & regeneration and to human development. The criteria for acceptance into these sections is identical to those outlined above. Authors and editors are encouraged to nominate appropriate manuscripts for inclusion in one of these sections.
期刊最新文献
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