Brain disorders represent a major challenge for today\'s societies. Despite intensive research efforts, therapeutic interventions for most psychiatric and aging-related disorders have been of moderate success. Obtaining better insight into the normal development of the nervous...
Brain disorders represent a major challenge for today\'s societies. Despite intensive research efforts, therapeutic interventions for most psychiatric and aging-related disorders have been of moderate success. Obtaining better insight into the normal development of the nervous system - in particular the underpinnings of funcitonal properties of specific neuronal cell types - might enable more targeted interventions in the future. The goal of this project is testing the hypothesis that alternative splicing is a central mechanism for the amplification of molecular diversity in neuronal cells and that it controls critical aspects of synaptic specificity. To this end, we proposed to implement novel mass-spectrometry and RNA sequencing methods to define molecular diversity of neuronal gene families in mouse neurons. Moreover, we sought to unravel the logic of neuronal receptor repertoires across cell populations and test the importance of cell type-specific alternative splicing programs for synapse specification.
In the first period of this project, we adopted and improved advanced technologies for the exploration of neuronal transcript isoforms in the mammalian nervous system. We demonstrated the function of regulators of RNA splicing as well as the control of synaptic properties by RNA splicecodes. This work was published in several peer-reviewed manuscripts and presented in form of posters and oral presentations to the scientific community and the general public.
\"Our work provides the first example for a highly selective action of a neuronal RNA-binding protein that controls synapse specification. This demonstrates that RNA alternative splicing does not just \"\"fine-tune\"\" cellular functions but has instructive roles in specifying neuronal properties. By Performing genome-wide assessment of neuronal cell type-specific alternative splicing we uncovered extensive cell type-specific transcript isoform repertoires in genetically-defined neuron populations. This work demonstrated for the first time the logic of alternative splicing programs across major neuron classes. Finally, we developed a web-platform for public access to data on cell type-specific alternative transcript regulation in the nervous system. This represents a major resource of high-quality data for the scientific community.
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More info: https://scheiffele-splice.scicore.unibas.ch/.