PLoS Genetics (Aug 2018)

Transcriptome analysis of adult Caenorhabditis elegans cells reveals tissue-specific gene and isoform expression.

  • Rachel Kaletsky,
  • Victoria Yao,
  • April Williams,
  • Alexi M Runnels,
  • Alicja Tadych,
  • Shiyi Zhou,
  • Olga G Troyanskaya,
  • Coleen T Murphy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007559
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. e1007559

Abstract

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The biology and behavior of adults differ substantially from those of developing animals, and cell-specific information is critical for deciphering the biology of multicellular animals. Thus, adult tissue-specific transcriptomic data are critical for understanding molecular mechanisms that control their phenotypes. We used adult cell-specific isolation to identify the transcriptomes of C. elegans' four major tissues (or "tissue-ome"), identifying ubiquitously expressed and tissue-specific "enriched" genes. These data newly reveal the hypodermis' metabolic character, suggest potential worm-human tissue orthologies, and identify tissue-specific changes in the Insulin/IGF-1 signaling pathway. Tissue-specific alternative splicing analysis identified a large set of collagen isoforms. Finally, we developed a machine learning-based prediction tool for 76 sub-tissue cell types, which we used to predict cellular expression differences in IIS/FOXO signaling, stage-specific TGF-β activity, and basal vs. memory-induced CREB transcription. Together, these data provide a rich resource for understanding the biology governing multicellular adult animals.