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Surveying the landscape of RNA isoform diversity and expression across 9 GTEx tissues using long-read sequencing data.
Page, Madeline L; Aguzzoli Heberle, Bernardo; Brandon, J Anthony; Wadsworth, Mark E; Gordon, Lacey A; Nations, Kayla A; Ebbert, Mark T W.
Afiliación
  • Page ML; Sanders-Brown Center on Aging, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
  • Aguzzoli Heberle B; Division of Biomedical Informatics, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
  • Brandon JA; Department of Neuroscience, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
  • Wadsworth ME; Sanders-Brown Center on Aging, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
  • Gordon LA; Division of Biomedical Informatics, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
  • Nations KA; Department of Neuroscience, College of Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
  • Ebbert MTW; Sanders-Brown Center on Aging, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jun 25.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405825
ABSTRACT
Even though alternative RNA splicing was discovered nearly 50 years ago (1977), we still understand very little about most isoforms arising from a single gene, including in which tissues they are expressed and if their functions differ. Human gene annotations suggest remarkable transcriptional complexity, with approximately 252,798 distinct RNA isoform annotations from 62,710 gene bodies (Ensembl v109; 2023), emphasizing the need to understand their biological effects. For example, 256 gene bodies have ≥50 annotated isoforms and 30 have ≥100, where one protein-coding gene (MAPK10) even has 192 distinct RNA isoform annotations. Whether such isoform diversity results from biological redundancy or spurious alternative splicing (i.e., noise), or whether individual isoforms have specialized functions (even if subtle) remains a mystery for most genes. Recent studies by Aguzzoli-Heberle et al., Leung et al., and Glinos et al. demonstrated long-read RNAseq enables improved RNA isoform quantification for essentially any tissue, cell type, or biological condition (e.g., disease, development, aging, etc.), making it possible to better assess individual isoform expression and function. While each study provided important discoveries related to RNA isoform diversity, deeper exploration is needed. We sought to quantify and characterize real isoform usage across tissues (compared to annotations). We used long-read RNAseq data from 58 GTEx samples across nine tissues (three brain, two heart, muscle, lung, liver, and cultured fibroblasts) generated by Glinos et al. and found considerable isoform diversity within and across tissues. Cerebellar hemisphere was the most transcriptionally complex tissue (22,522 distinct isoforms; 3,726 unique); liver was least diverse (12,435 distinct isoforms; 1,039 unique). We highlight gene clusters exhibiting high tissue-specific isoform diversity per tissue (e.g., TPM1 expresses 19 in heart's atrial appendage). We also validated 447 of the 700 new isoforms discovered by Aguzzoli-Heberle et al. and found that 88 were expressed in all nine tissues, while 58 were specific to a single tissue. This study represents a broad survey of the RNA isoform landscape, demonstrating isoform diversity across nine tissues and emphasizes the need to better understand how individual isoforms from a single gene body contribute to human health and disease.

Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: BioRxiv Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de datos: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: BioRxiv Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article