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Database Profile

Developing Human Brain Transcript Browser

General information

URL: https://sciso.gandallab.org
Full name: Developing Human Brain Transcript Browser
Description: The database provides a comprehensive catalog of isoform diversity in the developing human neocortex, generated through single-molecule long-read sequencing. It focuses on the role of transcript-isoform diversity in cellular identity and its implications for neuropsychiatric disorders, enabling exploration of genetic risk mechanisms through an online portal.
Year founded: 2023
Last update:
Version: v1.0
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: United States

Classification & Tag

Data type:
RNA
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University of California,Los Angeles
Address: Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California,Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA.
City:
Province/State: CA
Country/Region: United States
Contact name (PI/Team): Luis de la Torre-Ubieta
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): ldelatorreubieta@mednet.ucla.edu

Publications

36993726
Developmental isoform diversity in the human neocortex informs neuropsychiatric risk mechanisms. [PMID: 36993726]
Ashok Patowary, Pan Zhang, Connor Jops, Celine K Vuong, Xinzhu Ge, Kangcheng Hou, Minsoo Kim, Naihua Gong, Michael Margolis, Daniel Vo, Xusheng Wang, Chunyu Liu, Bogdan Pasaniuc, Jingyi Jessica Li, Michael J Gandal, Luis de la Torre-Ubieta

RNA splicing is highly prevalent in the brain and has strong links to neuropsychiatric disorders, yet the role of cell-type-specific splicing or transcript-isoform diversity during human brain development has not been systematically investigated. Here, we leveraged single-molecule long-read sequencing to deeply profile the full-length transcriptome of the germinal zone (GZ) and cortical plate (CP) regions of the developing human neocortex at tissue and single-cell resolution. We identified 214,516 unique isoforms, of which 72.6% are novel (unannotated in Gencode-v33), and uncovered a substantial contribution of transcript-isoform diversity, regulated by RNA binding proteins, in defining cellular identity in the developing neocortex. We leveraged this comprehensive isoform-centric gene annotation to re-prioritize thousands of rare de novo risk variants and elucidate genetic risk mechanisms for neuropsychiatric disorders.
ONE-SENTENCE SUMMARY: A cell-specific atlas of gene isoform expression helps shape our understanding of brain development and disease.
STRUCTURED ABSTRACT: The development of the human brain is regulated by precise molecular and genetic mechanisms driving spatio-temporal and cell-type-specific transcript expression programs. Alternative splicing, a major mechanism increasing transcript diversity, is highly prevalent in the human brain, influences many aspects of brain development, and has strong links to neuropsychiatric disorders. Despite this, the cell-type-specific transcript-isoform diversity of the developing human brain has not been systematically investigated. Understanding splicing patterns and isoform diversity across the developing neocortex has translational relevance and can elucidate genetic risk mechanisms in neurodevelopmental disorders. However, short-read sequencing, the prevalent technology for transcriptome profiling, is not well suited to capturing alternative splicing and isoform diversity. To address this, we employed third-generation long-read sequencing, which enables capture and sequencing of complete individual RNA molecules, to deeply profile the full-length transcriptome of the germinal zone (GZ) and cortical plate (CP) regions of the developing human neocortex at tissue and single-cell resolution. We profiled microdissected GZ and CP regions of post-conception week (PCW) 15-17 human neocortex in bulk and at single-cell resolution across six subjects using high-fidelity long-read sequencing (PacBio IsoSeq). We identified 214,516 unique isoforms, of which 72.6% were novel (unannotated in Gencode), and >7,000 novel exons, expanding the proteome by 92,422 putative proteoforms. We uncovered thousands of isoform switches during cortical neurogenesis predicted to impact RNA regulatory domains or protein structure and implicating previously uncharacterized RNA-binding proteins in cellular identity and neuropsychiatric disease. At the single-cell level, early-stage excitatory neurons exhibited the greatest isoform diversity, and isoform-centric single-cell clustering led to the identification of previously uncharacterized cell states. We systematically assessed the contribution of transcriptomic features, and localized cell and spatio-temporal transcript expression signatures across neuropsychiatric disorders, revealing predominant enrichments in dynamic isoform expression and utilization patterns and that the number and complexity of isoforms per gene is strongly predictive of disease. Leveraging this resource, we re-prioritized thousands of rare de novo risk variants associated with autism spectrum disorders (ASD), intellectual disability (ID), and neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs), more broadly, to potentially more severe consequences and revealed a larger proportion of cryptic splice variants with the expanded transcriptome annotation provided in this study. Our study offers a comprehensive landscape of isoform diversity in the human neocortex during development. This extensive cataloging of novel isoforms and splicing events sheds light on the underlying mechanisms of neurodevelopmental disorders and presents an opportunity to explore rare genetic variants linked to these conditions. The implications of our findings extend beyond fundamental neuroscience, as they provide crucial insights into the molecular basis of developmental brain disorders and pave the way for targeted therapeutic interventions. To facilitate exploration of this dataset we developed an online portal ( https://sciso.gandallab.org/ ).

bioRxiv. 2023:() | 0 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

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Created on: 2024-07-16
Curated by:
Miaomiao Wang [2024-08-30]
shaosen zhang [2024-07-16]