4.7 Article

A spatial and temporal map of C. elegans gene expression

Journal

GENOME RESEARCH
Volume 21, Issue 2, Pages 325-341

Publisher

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gr.114595.110

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH NCRR
  2. Genome Canada
  3. Genome British Columbia
  4. Max Planck Society
  5. DFG [RA1894/1-1]
  6. EMBL
  7. NIH [HG004263, NS49743, GM34059, GM83548, R01 NS064273, NS26115, MH077302, P50 DK44757, P30 CA68485, P60 DK20593, P30 DK58404, HD15052, P30 EY08126, PO1 HL6744]

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The C. elegans genome has been completely sequenced, and the developmental anatomy of this model organism is described at single-cell resolution. Here we utilize strategies that exploit this precisely defined architecture to link gene expression to cell type. We obtained RNAs from specific cells and from each developmental stage using tissue-specific promoters to mark cells for isolation by FACS or for mRNA extraction by the mRNA-tagging method. We then generated gene expression profiles of more than 30 different cells and developmental stages using tiling arrays. Machine-learning-based analysis detected transcripts corresponding to established gene models and revealed novel transcriptionally active regions ( TARs) in noncoding domains that comprise at least 10% of the total C. elegans genome. Our results show that about 75% of transcripts with detectable expression are differentially expressed among developmental stages and across cell types. Examination of known tissue-and cell-specific transcripts validates these data sets and suggests that newly identified TARs may exercise cell-specific functions. Additionally, we used self-organizing maps to define groups of coregulated transcripts and applied regulatory element analysis to identify known transcription factor-and miRNA-binding sites, as well as novel motifs that likely function to control subsets of these genes. By using cell-specific, whole-genome profiling strategies, we have detected a large number of novel transcripts and produced high-resolution gene expression maps that provide a basis for establishing the roles of individual genes in cellular differentiation.

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