Abstract

Increased information on the encoded mammalian genome is expected to facilitate an integrated understanding of complex anatomical structure and function based on the knowledge of gene products. Determination of gene expression-anatomy associations is crucial for this understanding. To elicit the association in the three-dimensional (3D) space, we introduce a novel technique for comprehensive mapping of endogenous gene expression into a web-accessible standard space: Transcriptome Tomography. The technique is based on conjugation of sequential tissue-block sectioning, all fractions of which are used for molecular measurements of gene expression densities, and the block- face imaging, which are used for 3D reconstruction of the fractions. To generate a 3D map, tissues are serially sectioned in each of three orthogonal planes and the expression density data are mapped using a tomographic technique. This rapid and unbiased mapping technique using a relatively small number of original data points allows researchers to create their own expression maps in the broad anatomical context of the space. In the first instance we generated a dataset of 36,000 maps, reconstructed from data of 61 fractions measured with microarray, covering the whole mouse brain (ViBrism: http://vibrism.riken.jp/3dviewer/ex/index.html) in one month. After computational estimation of the mapping accuracy we validated the dataset against existing data with respect to the expression location and density. To demonstrate the relevance of the framework, we showed disease related expression of Huntington’s disease gene and Bdnf. Our tomographic approach is applicable to analysis of any biological molecules derived from frozen tissues, organs and whole embryos, and the maps are spatially isotropic and well suited to the analysis in the standard space (e.g. Waxholm Space for brain-atlas databases). This will facilitate research creating and using open-standards for a molecular-based understanding of complex structures; and will contribute to new insights into a broad range of biological and medical questions.

Highlights

  • Increased information on the encoded mammalian genome has led to an integrated understanding of complex biological structure and function based on the knowledge of gene expression [1,2]

  • Previous in situ hybridization (ISH)-based approaches to comprehensive endogenous gene expression maps in the mouse include: the Edinburgh Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression (EMAGE) for the embryo equipped with section data, whole-mount data and optical projection tomography OPT data [4,5], GenePaint [6], St

  • Aiming at rapid and unbiased mapping of gene expression densities in a 3D image space, we introduce a tomographic framework, Transcriptome Tomography

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Summary

Introduction

Increased information on the encoded mammalian genome has led to an integrated understanding of complex biological structure and function based on the knowledge of gene expression [1,2]. Previous in situ hybridization (ISH)-based approaches to comprehensive endogenous gene expression (transcriptome) maps in the mouse include: the Edinburgh Mouse Atlas of Gene Expression (EMAGE) for the embryo equipped with section data, whole-mount data and optical projection tomography OPT data [4,5], GenePaint [6], St. Jude’s Brain Gene Expression Map (BGEM) [7] and the Allen Brain Atlas of the Mouse (ABA) [3], which covers the adult whole mouse brain in 200 mm resolution of slice distances. Jude’s Brain Gene Expression Map (BGEM) [7] and the Allen Brain Atlas of the Mouse (ABA) [3], which covers the adult whole mouse brain in 200 mm resolution of slice distances In these databases, systematic investigation of fine expression data would be invaluable because gene expression is characterized at the cellular level. 3D reconstruction experiments have been limited to very selective conditions

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