Glia-specific nuclei isolation and single cell transcriptomics inform astrocyte pathology in human temporal lobe epilepsy

Published: 29 October 2019| Version 2 | DOI: 10.17632/w4d7sdc629.2
Contributor:
Nadejda Tsankova

Description

The role of human glia in many neurological disorders is still poorly understood due to the lack of tools that reliably isolate specific glial subpopulations from bulk tissue, directly from their native niche. To better understand the contributions of glial pathology in human epilepsy, we developed and validated a novel sorting strategy that simultaneously isolates nuclei populations of astrocytes (PAX6+), oligodendroglial progenitors (OPCs) (OLIG2+) and neurons (NEUN+) from non-pathological fresh-frozen human postmortem temporal neocortex brain tissue (TL Control) and then employed it, in combination with single cell RNA-seq, to characterize the cell-type specific transcriptome alterations in epilepsy temporal neocortex derived from fresh surgical material in patients with medically refractory temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). The provided Metadata file contains exhaustive information on the different types of processed data provided herein, and the protocols used to generate it. Please not that due to space constriction, the raw FASTQ data are only provided to the GEO (currently submitted in folder "GEO_Epilepsy:nadiats", review in process, to be released immediately after review).

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Institutions

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Categories

RNA

Licence