Three-dimension transcriptomics maps of whole mouse embryo during organogenesis

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Abstract

Understanding mammalian development heavily relies on classical animal models like the house mouse (Mus musculus). Advanced spatial transcriptomics has enabled biologists to break new ground in studies of molecular dynamics and cellular patterning during embryonic development with spatiotemporal resolution. To construct a comprehensive developmental trajectory, current three-dimensional (3D) spatial transcriptomic profiling leverages mouse embryos from gastrulation (E5.5) to organogenesis (E13.5) in continuity. However, a crucial phase for early organogenesis between E9.5 and E11.5 was deficient. To unveil the mystery of this stage, we present the 3D transcriptomics of mouse embryos at E9.5 and E11.5, with a widely applicable reconstruction workflow that bypasses sophisticated bioinformatic calculations. As our 3D atlas is generated at single-cell resolution, we demonstrate how organogenetic processes can be interpreted at different levels of granularity, from local cellular interactions to whole embryonic regionalization. We release the open-access database MOSTA3D (Mouse Organogenesis Spatiotemporal Transcriptomic Atlas in Three-dimensional) and hope a broader community will contribute to extending this framework from conception to senility in the near future.

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