Abstract
AbstractIncreasing evidence suggests that alternative splicing plays an important role in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a devastating neurodegenerative disorder involving the intracellular aggregation of hyperphosphorylated tau. We used long-read cDNA sequencing to profile transcript diversity in the entorhinal cortex of wild-type (WT) and transgenic (TG) mice harboring a mutant form of human tau. Whole transcriptome profiling showed that previously reported gene-level expression differences between WT and TG mice reflect changes in the abundance of specific transcripts. Ultradeep targeted long-read cDNA sequencing of genes implicated in AD revealed hundreds of novel isoforms and identified specific transcripts associated with the development of tau pathology. Our results highlight the importance of differential transcript usage, even in the absence of gene-level expression alterations, as a mechanism underpinning gene regulation in the development of neuropathology. Our transcript annotations and a novel informatics pipeline for the analysis of long-read transcript sequencing data are provided as a resource to the community.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory