Transcriptional atlas of Daphnia magna
- Ishaan Dua,
- Lev Yampolsky
Lev Yampolsky
East Tennessee State University
Corresponding Author:yampolsk@etsu.edu
Author ProfileAbstract
Transcriptomics studies are more likely to achieve predictive results
when they rely on tissue- and cell-specific transcriptional data.
Identification of cell types in novel model organisms by their
transcriptional profiles is difficult without data on transcriptional
differences among major tissues and anatomical features. Here we report
the first dataset on tissue- and organ-specific transcriptomics in
freshwater plankton crustacean Daphnia magna, reporting markers of
embryos, hemocytes, gut, carapace, antennae-2 and head, as well as the
remaining carcass. Embryos are the most transcriptionally different from
adults' features and antennae and the carapace are the most
differentiated among them. We demonstrate that transcriptional markers
of embryos vs. adults and of various adult anatomy features can be used
to provide validation and functional explanation to published
differential expression in response to environmental factors like
infection, hypoxia, toxicants, or kairomones, to annotate Daphnia single
cell data, and to ask questions about transcriptional diversification
within extended gene families.