Combining long-term circuit mapping and network transcriptomics with SiR-N2c.
Hassal LeeErnesto CiabattiAna González-RuedaElena WilliamsFiona NugentSouradip MookerjeeFabio MorgeseMarco TripodiPublished in: Nature methods (2023)
An exciting frontier in circuit neuroscience lies at the intersection between neural network mapping and single-cell genomics. Monosynaptic rabies viruses provide a promising platform for the merger of circuit mapping methods with -omics approaches. However, three key limitations have hindered the extraction of physiologically meaningful gene expression profiles from rabies-mapped circuits: inherent viral cytotoxicity, high viral immunogenicity and virus-induced alteration of cellular transcriptional regulation. These factors alter the transcriptional and translational profiles of infected neurons and their neighboring cells. To overcome these limitations we applied a self-inactivating genomic modification to the less immunogenic rabies strain, CVS-N2c, to generate a self-inactivating CVS-N2c rabies virus (SiR-N2c). SiR-N2c not only eliminates undesired cytotoxic effects but also substantially reduces gene expression alterations in infected neurons and dampens the recruitment of innate and acquired immune responses, thus enabling open-ended interventions on neural networks and their genetic characterization using single-cell genomic approaches.
Keyphrases
- neural network
- single cell
- immune response
- rna seq
- gene expression
- high throughput
- high resolution
- copy number
- high density
- sars cov
- induced apoptosis
- spinal cord
- dna methylation
- cell cycle arrest
- physical activity
- genome wide
- toll like receptor
- transcription factor
- high glucose
- signaling pathway
- diabetic rats
- spinal cord injury
- heat shock
- drug induced
- pi k akt