Microbial single-cell RNA sequencing by split-pool barcoding

Anna Kuchina(University of Washington), Leandra Brettner(University of Washington), Luana Paleologu(University of Washington), Charles M. Roco(University of Washington), Alexander Rosenberg(University of Washington), Alberto Carignano(University of Washington), Ryan D. Kibler(University of Washington), Matthew Hirano(University of Washington), R. William DePaolo(University of Washington), Georg Seelig(University of Washington)
Science
February 19, 2021
Cited by 333Open Access
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Abstract

Bacterial cell gene expression Single-cell genomics in bacteria has lagged relative to in eukaryotes because of their tough bacterial cell walls, low messenger RNA content, and lack of many posttranscriptional modifications. To tackle this challenge, Kuchina et al. developed microbial split-pool ligation transcriptomics, or microSPLiT, a single-cell sequencing method for both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Sequencing both Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis showed differences in the heat shock response. Examining B. subtilis transcriptional patterns revealed that a small fraction of cells grown in laboratory medium express a myo-inositol catabolism pathway, which the cell could use in nonlaboratory environments, thus highlighting how microSPLiT can identify rare cellular states. Science , this issue p. eaba5257


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