Femtosecond laser microdissection for isolation of regenerating C. elegans neurons for single-cell RNA sequencing.
Peisen ZhaoSudip MondalChris MartinAndrew DuPlissisShahab ChizariKe-Yue MaRajani MaiyaRobert O MessingNing JiangAdela Ben-YakarPublished in: Nature methods (2023)
Our understanding of nerve regeneration can be enhanced by delineating its underlying molecular activities at single-neuron resolution in model organisms such as Caenorhabditis elegans. Existing cell isolation techniques cannot isolate neurons with specific regeneration phenotypes from C. elegans. We present femtosecond laser microdissection (fs-LM), a single-cell isolation method that dissects specific cells directly from living tissue by leveraging the micrometer-scale precision of fs-laser ablation. We show that fs-LM facilitates sensitive and specific gene expression profiling by single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), while mitigating the stress-related transcriptional artifacts induced by tissue dissociation. scRNA-seq of fs-LM isolated regenerating neurons revealed transcriptional programs that are correlated with either successful or failed regeneration in wild-type and dlk-1 (0) animals, respectively. This method also allowed studying heterogeneity displayed by the same type of neuron and found gene modules with expression patterns correlated with axon regrowth rate. Our results establish fs-LM as a spatially resolved single-cell isolation method for phenotype-to-genotype mapping.
Keyphrases
- single cell
- rna seq
- stem cells
- high throughput
- genome wide
- spinal cord
- wild type
- genome wide identification
- copy number
- gene expression
- transcription factor
- poor prognosis
- high resolution
- wound healing
- induced apoptosis
- public health
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- spinal cord injury
- binding protein
- magnetic resonance
- cell proliferation
- single molecule
- cell cycle arrest
- bone marrow
- high speed
- multidrug resistant
- heat stress
- cone beam
- radiofrequency ablation
- drug induced