U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

SRX10769075: GSM5280004: Spatial Transcriptomics 384 well plate (Spatial_T_H6B); Physarum polycephalum; RNA-Seq
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina HiSeq 2500) run: 1.1M spots, 214M bases, 116.7Mb downloads

Submitted by: NCBI (GEO)
Study: Spatial transcriptomic and single-nucleus analysis reveals heterogeneity in a gigantic single-celled syncytium
show Abstracthide Abstract
In multicellular organisms, the specification, coordination, and compartmentalization of cell types enable the formation of complex body plans. However, some eukaryotic protists such as slime molds generate diverse and complex structures while remaining in a multinucleated syncytial state. It is unknown if different regions of these giant syncytial cells have distinct transcriptional responses to environmental encounters, and if nuclei within the cell diversify into heterogeneous states. Here we performed spatial transcriptome analysis of the slime mold Physarum polycephalum in the plasmodium state under different environmental conditions, and used single-nucleus RNA-sequencing to dissect gene expression heterogeneity among nuclei. Our data identifies transcriptome regionality in the organism that associates with proliferation, syncytial substructures, and localized environmental conditions. Further, we find that nuclei are heterogenous in their transcriptional profile, and may process local signals within the plasmodium to coordinate cell growth, metabolism, and reproduction. To understand how nuclei variation within the syncytium compares to heterogeneity in single-nucleated cells, we analyzed states in single Physarum amoebal cells. We observed amoebal cell states at different stages of mitosis and meiosis, and identified cytokinetic features that are specific to nuclei divisions within the syncytium. Notably, we do not find evidence for predefined transcriptomic states in the amoebae that are observed in the syncytium. Our data shows that a single-celled slime mold can control its gene expression in a region-specific manner while lacking cellular compartmentalization, and suggests that nuclei are mobile processors facilitating local specialized functions. More broadly, slime molds offer the extraordinary opportunity to explore how organisms can evolve regulatory mechanisms to divide labor, specialize, balance competition with cooperation, and perform other foundational principles that govern the logic of life. Overall design: Bulk RNA-seq measurements of 719 spatially resolved Physarum polycephalum plasmodium parts, single-cell RNA-seq data of haploid amoeba and single-nucleus RNA-seq data of single-celled multinucleated plasmodia were acuired to describe and understand the molecular processes guiding complex behaviors and shapes in a multinucleated syncyctium.
Sample: Spatial Transcriptomics 384 well plate (Spatial_T_H6B)
SAMN19008836 • SRS8854262 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Instrument: Illumina HiSeq 2500
Strategy: RNA-Seq
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: cDNA
Layout: PAIRED
Construction protocol: SmartSeq2 (Wollny et al. 2016 bioRxiv / Picelli et al. 2013 Nat Methods) Illumina Nextera
Experiment attributes:
GEO Accession: GSM5280004
Links:
Runs: 1 run, 1.1M spots, 214M bases, 116.7Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR144179831,069,807214M116.7Mb2022-03-03

ID:
14307939

Supplemental Content

Search details

See more...

Recent activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...