Human brains are prone to neurodegeneration, given that endogenous neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPCs) fail to support neurogenesis. To investigate the molecular programs potentially mediating neurodegeneration-induced NSPC plasticity in regenerating organisms, we generated an Amyloid-β42 (Aβ42)-dependent neurotoxic model in adult zebrafish brain through cerebroventricular microinjection of cell-penetrating Aβ42 derivatives. Aβ42 deposits in neurons and causes phenotypes reminiscent of amyloid pathophysiology: apoptosis, microglial activation, synaptic degeneration, and learning deficits. Aβ42 also induces NSPC proliferation and enhanced neurogenesis. Interleukin-4 (IL4) is activated primarily in neurons and microglia/macrophages in response to Aβ42 and is sufficient to increase NSPC proliferation and neurogenesis via STAT6 phosphorylation through the IL4 receptor in NSPCs. Our results reveal a crosstalk between neurons and immune cells mediated by IL4/STAT6 signaling, which induces NSPC plasticity in zebrafish brains.
Highlights d Single-cell transcriptomics reveals neural stem cell/glia heterogeneity in zebrafish d Different stem cell populations can be defined spatially and molecularly d Amyloid-b-42 and interleukin-4 induce plasticity of certain progenitor populations d Interaction mapping predicts the pathways that regulate neural stem cell plasticity
Highlights d LT-HSCs conserve epigenetic memory of previous infectious challenge d Increased transcriptional response of open myeloid enhancers to secondary stimulation d Memory improves myeloid differentiation and resistance to secondary infection
Our current understanding of how natural genetic variation affects gene expression beyond
well-annotated coding genes is still limited. The use of deep sequencing technologies for the study
of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) has the potential to close this gap. Here, we
generated the first recombinant strain library for fission yeast and conducted an RNA-seq-based QTL
study of the coding, non-coding, and antisense transcriptomes. We show that the frequency of distal
effects (trans-eQTLs) greatly exceeds the number of local effects
(cis-eQTLs) and that non-coding RNAs are as likely to be affected by eQTLs as
protein-coding RNAs. We identified a genetic variation of swc5 that modifies the
levels of 871 RNAs, with effects on both sense and antisense transcription, and show that this
effect most likely goes through a compromised deposition of the histone variant H2A.Z. The strains,
methods, and datasets generated here provide a rich resource for future studies.
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