Abstract

Cis-regulatory modules (CRMs) control spatiotemporal gene expression patterns in embryos. While measurement of quantitative CRM activities has become efficient, measurement of spatial CRM activities still relies on slow, one-by-one methods. To overcome this bottleneck, we have developed a high-throughput method that can simultaneously measure quantitative and spatial CRM activities. The new method builds profiles of quantitative CRM activities measured at single-embryo resolution in many mosaic embryos and uses these profiles as a ‘fingerprint’ of spatial patterns. We show in sea urchin embryos that the new method, Multiplex and Mosaic Observation of Spatial Information encoded in Cis-regulatory modules (MMOSAIC), can efficiently predict spatial activities of new CRMs and can detect spatial responses of CRMs to gene perturbations. We anticipate that MMOSAIC will facilitate systems-wide functional analyses of CRMs in embryos.

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