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Analyzing Alternative Splicing in Alzheimer's Disease Postmortem Brain: a Cell-level Perspective

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Specialty Molecular Biology
Date 2023 Oct 6
PMID 37799732
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disease with no effective cure that attacks the brain's cells resulting in memory loss and changes in behavior and language skills. Alternative splicing is a highly regulated process influenced by specific cell types and has been implicated in age-related disorders such as neurodegenerative diseases. A comprehensive detection of alternative splicing events (ASEs) at the cellular level in postmortem brain tissue can provide valuable insights into AD pathology. Here, we provided cell-level ASEs in postmortem brain tissue by employing bioinformatics pipelines on a bulk RNA sequencing study sorted by cell types and two single-cell RNA sequencing studies from the prefrontal cortex. This comprehensive analysis revealed previously overlooked splicing and expression changes in AD patient brains. Among the observed alterations were changed in the splicing and expression of transcripts associated with chaperones, including in astrocytes and excitatory neurons, in astrocytes and endothelial cells, and in microglia and tauopathy-afflicted neurons, which were associated with differential expression of the splicing factor . In addition, novel, unknown transcripts were altered, and structural changes were observed in lncRNAs such as in neurons. This work provides a novel strategy to identify the notable ASEs at the cell level in neurodegeneration, which revealed cell type-specific splicing changes in AD. This finding may contribute to interpreting associations between splicing and neurodegenerative disease outcomes.

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