Full-length transcript sequencing of human and mouse cerebral cortex identifies widespread isoform diversity and alternative splicing

Szi Kay Leung(University of Exeter), Aaron R. Jeffries(University of Exeter), Isabel Castanho(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Ben T. Jordan(University of Virginia), Karen Moore(University of Exeter), Jonathan Davies(University of Exeter), Emma Dempster(University of Exeter), Nicholas J. Bray(Cardiff University), Paul O’Neill(University of Exeter), Elizabeth Tseng(Pacific Biosciences (United States)), Zeshan Ahmed(Eli Lilly (United Kingdom)), David Collier(Eli Lilly (United Kingdom)), Erin D. Jeffery(University of Virginia), Shyam Prabhakar(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Leonard C. Schalkwyk(University of Essex), Connor Jops(University of California, Los Angeles), Michael J. Gandal(University of California, Los Angeles), Gloria Sheynkman(University of California, Los Angeles), Eilís Hannon(University of Exeter), Jonathan Mill(University of Exeter)
Cell Reports
November 1, 2021
Cited by 191Open Access
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Abstract

Alternative splicing is a post-transcriptional regulatory mechanism producing distinct mRNA molecules from a single pre-mRNA with a prominent role in the development and function of the central nervous system. We used long-read isoform sequencing to generate full-length transcript sequences in the human and mouse cortex. We identify novel transcripts not present in existing genome annotations, including transcripts mapping to putative novel (unannotated) genes and fusion transcripts incorporating exons from multiple genes. Global patterns of transcript diversity are similar between human and mouse cortex, although certain genes are characterized by striking differences between species. We also identify developmental changes in alternative splicing, with differential transcript usage between human fetal and adult cortex. Our data confirm the importance of alternative splicing in the cortex, dramatically increasing transcriptional diversity and representing an important mechanism underpinning gene regulation in the brain. We provide transcript-level data for human and mouse cortex as a resource to the scientific community.


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