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[Preprint]. 2023 Dec 23:2023.12.22.573083. [Version 1] doi: 10.1101/2023.12.22.573083

Single-nucleus multiomic atlas of frontal cortex in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with a deep learning-based decoding of alternative polyadenylation mechanisms

Paul M McKeever, Aiden M Sababi, Raghav Sharma, Nicholas Khuu, Zhiyu Xu, Shu Yi Shen, Shangxi Xiao, Philip McGoldrick, Elias Orouji, Troy Ketela, Christine Sato, Danielle Moreno, Naomi Visanji, Gabor G Kovacs, Julia Keith, Lorne Zinman, Ekaterina Rogaeva, Hani Goodarzi, Gary D Bader, Janice Robertson
PMCID: PMC10769403  PMID: 38187588

Abstract

The understanding of how different cell types contribute to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) pathogenesis is limited. Here we generated a single-nucleus transcriptomic and epigenomic atlas of the frontal cortex of ALS cases with C9orf72 (C9) hexanucleotide repeat expansions and sporadic ALS (sALS). Our findings reveal shared pathways in C9-ALS and sALS, characterized by synaptic dysfunction in excitatory neurons and a disease-associated state in microglia. The disease subtypes diverge with loss of astrocyte homeostasis in C9-ALS, and a more substantial disturbance of inhibitory neurons in sALS. Leveraging high depth 3’-end sequencing, we found a widespread switch towards distal polyadenylation (PA) site usage across ALS subtypes relative to controls. To explore this differential alternative PA (APA), we developed APA-Net, a deep neural network model that uses transcript sequence and expression levels of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) to predict cell-type specific APA usage and RBP interactions likely to regulate APA across disease subtypes.

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