A single-cell, long-read, isoform-resolved case-control study of FTD reveals cell-type-specific and broad splicing dysregulation in human brain. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Progranulin-deficient frontotemporal dementia (GRN-FTD) is a major cause of familial FTD with TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) pathology, which is linked to exon dysregulation. However, little is known about this dysregulation in glial and neuronal cells. Here, using splice-junction-covering enrichment probes, we introduce single-nuclei long-read RNA sequencing 2 (SnISOr-Seq2), targeting 3,630 high-interest genes without loss of precision, and complete the first single-cell, long-read-resolved case-control study for neurodegeneration. Exons affected by FTD-associated skipping are shorter than those whose inclusion is increased. Up to 30% of cell-(sub)type-specific splicing dysregulation is masked by other cell types or cortical layers. Surprisingly, strong splicing dysregulation events can occur in select but not all cell types. In some cases, a cell type switches in FTD to the splicing pattern of a different cell type. In addition, in separate GRN-FTD samples, the more FTD-prone frontal cortex exhibits more FTD-associated splicing patterns than the occipital cortex. Our methodologies are widely applicable to brain and other diseases.

publication date

  • September 5, 2025

Research

keywords

  • Brain
  • Frontotemporal Dementia
  • RNA Splicing
  • Single-Cell Analysis

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.celrep.2025.116198

PubMed ID

  • 40913764

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 44

issue

  • 9