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journal article

Three-dimensional intact-tissue sequencing of single-cell transcriptional states

Science
Publication Date: 7/27/2018

Abstract: Retrieving high-content gene-expression information while retaining three-dimensional (3D) positional anatomy at cellular resolution has been difficult, limiting integrative understanding of structure and function in complex biological tissues. We developed and applied a technology for 3D intact-tissue RNA sequencing, termed STARmap (spatially-resolved transcript amplicon readout mapping), which integrates hydrogel-tissue chemistry, targeted signal amplification, and in situ sequencing. The capabilities of STARmap were tested by mapping 160 to 1020 genes simultaneously in sections of mouse brain at single-cell resolution with high efficiency, accuracy, and reproducibility. Moving to thick tissue blocks, we observed a molecularly defined gradient distribution of excitatory-neuron subtypes across cubic millimeter-scale volumes (>30,000 cells) and a short-range 3D self-clustering in many inhibitory-neuron subtypes that could be identified and described with 3D STARmap.

Authors: Wang X, Allen WE, Wright MA, Sylwestrak EL, Samusik N, Vesuna S, Evans K, Liu C, Ramakrishnan C, Liu J, Nolan GP, Bava FA, Deisseroth K

This content will become publicly available on June 15, 2019. 

Xiao Wang
William E. Allen
Matthew A. Wright
Emily L. Sylwestrak
Nikolay Samusik
Sam Vesuna
Kathryn Evans
Cindy Liu
Charu Ramakrishnan
Jia Liu
Garry P. Nolan
Felice-Alessio Bava
Karl Deisseroth