Single Cell Transcriptome Defines Cell Type Repertoire of Adult Daphnia
magna
- Indira Krishnan ,
- Lev Yampolsky,
- Kseniya Petrova ,
- Leonid Peshkin
Leonid Peshkin
Harvard Medical School
Corresponding Author:leonid_peshkin@hms.harvard.edu
Author ProfileAbstract
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Detailed knowledge of transcriptional responses to environmental cues is
impossible without single cell (SC) resolution data. We performed two SC
RNAseq experiments surveying transcriptional profiles of females and
males of Daphnia magna, a freshwater plankton crustacean which is both a
classic and emerging new model for eco-physiology, toxicology, and
evolutionary genomics. We were able to identify over 30 distinct cell
types about half of which could be functionally annotated. First, we
identified ovaries- and testis-related cell types by focusing on female-
and male-specific clusters. Second, we compared markers between SC
clusters and bulk RNAseq data on transcriptional profiles of early
embryos, circulating hemocytes, midgut, heads (containing brain, eyes,
muscles, and hepatic caeca), antennae II, and carapace. Finally, we
compared transcriptional profiles of Daphnia cell clusters with
orthologous markers of 250+ cell types annotated in Drosophila cell
atlas. This allowed us to recognize striated myocites, gut enterocytes,
cuticular cells, as well as 5 different neuron types, including
photoreceptors. One well-defined cluster showed a significant enrichment
in markers of both hemocytes and fat body of Drosophila, but not with
bulk RNAseq data from circulating hemocytes, allowing us to hypothesize
the existence of non-circulating, fat body-associated population of
hemocytes in Daphnia. On the other hand, the circulating hemocytes
express numerous cuticular proteins suggesting their role, in addition
to macrophagy, in wound repair. The baseline SC resource presented here
will be useful for a variety of researchers using Daphnia to answer
in-depth questions in ecophysiology, toxicology and biology of
adaptation to changing environment.22 Aug 2024Submitted to Molecular Ecology 26 Aug 2024Submission Checks Completed
26 Aug 2024Assigned to Editor
26 Aug 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
26 Sep 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned