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The transcriptome is the set of all RNA transcripts, including coding and non-coding, in an individual or a population of cells. The term can also sometimes be used to refer to all RNAs, or just mRNA, depending on the particular experiment. The term transcriptome is a portmanteau of the words transcript and genome; it is associated with the process of transcript production during the biological process of transcription.
The early stages of transcriptome annotations began with cDNA libraries published in the 1980s. Subsequently, the advent of high-throughput technology led to faster and more efficient ways of obtaining data about the transcriptome. Two biological techniques are used to study the transcriptome, namely DNA microarray, a hybridization-based technique and RNA-seq, a sequence-based approach. RNA-seq is the preferred method and has been the dominant transcriptomics technique since the 2010s. Single-cell transcriptomics allows tracking of transcript changes over time within individual cells.
Data obtained from the transcriptome is used in research to gain insight into processes such as cellular differentiation, carcinogenesis, transcription regulation and biomarker discovery among others. Transcriptome-obtained data also finds applications in establishing phylogenetic relationships during the process of evolution and in in vitro fertilization. The transcriptome is closely related to other -ome based biological fields of study; it is complementary to the proteome and the metabolome and encompasses the translatome, exome, meiome and thanatotranscriptome which can be seen as ome fields studying specific types of RNA transcripts. There are quantifiable and conserved relationships between the Transcriptome and other -omes, and Transcriptomics data can be used effectively to predict other molecular species, such as metabolites. There are numerous publicly available transcriptome databases.
Etymology and history
The word transcriptome is a portmanteau of the words transcript and genome. It appeared along with other neologisms formed using the suffixes -ome and -omics to denote all studies conducted on a genome-wide scale in the fields of life sciences and technology. As such, transcriptome and transcriptomics were one of the first words to emerge along with genome and proteome. The first study to present a case of a collection of a cDNA library for silk moth mRNA was published in 1979. The first seminal study to mention and investigate the transcriptome of an organism was published in 1997 and it described 60,633 transcripts expressed in S. cerevisiae using serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE). With the rise of high-throughput technologies and bioinformatics and the subsequent increased computational power, it became increasingly efficient and easy to characterize and analyze enormous amount of data. Attempts to characterize the transcriptome became more prominent with the advent of automated DNA sequencing during the 1980s. During the 1990s, expressed sequence tag sequencing was used to identify genes and their fragments. This was followed by techniques such as serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE), cap analysis of gene expression (CAGE), and massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS).
Transcription
The transcriptome encompasses all the ribonucleic acid (RNA) transcripts present in a given organism or experimental sample. RNA is the main carrier of genetic information that is responsible for the process of converting DNA into an organism's phenotype. A gene can give rise to a single-stranded messenger RNA (mRNA) through a molecular process known as transcription; this mRNA is complementary to the strand of DNA it originated from. The enzyme RNA polymerase II attaches to the template DNA strand and catalyzes the addition of ribonucleotides to the 3' end of the growing sequence of the mRNA transcript.
In order to initiate its function, RNA polymerase II needs to recognize a promoter sequence, located upstream (5') of the gene. In eukaryotes, this process is mediated by transcription factors, most notably Transcription factor II D (TFIID) which recognizes the TATA box and aids in the positioning of RNA polymerase at the appropriate start site. To finish the production of the RNA transcript, termination takes place usually several hundred nuclecotides away from the termination sequence and cleavage takes place. This process occurs in the nucleus of a cell along with RNA processing by which mRNA molecules are capped, spliced and polyadenylated to increase their stability before being subsequently taken to the cytoplasm. The mRNA gives rise to proteins through the process of translation that takes place in ribosomes.
Types of RNA transcripts
Almost all functional transcripts are derived from known genes. The only exceptions are a small number of transcripts that might play a direct role in regulating gene expression near the prompters of known genes. (See Enhancer RNA.)
Gene occupy most of prokaryotic genomes so most of their genomes are transcribed. Many eukaryotic genomes are very large and known genes may take up only a fraction of the genome. In mammals, for example, known genes only account for 40-50% of the genome. Nevertheless, identified transcripts often map to a much larger fraction of the genome suggesting that the transcriptome contains spurious transcripts that do not come from genes. Some of these transcripts are known to be non-functional because they map to transcribed pseudogenes or degenerative transposons and viruses. Others map to unidentified regions of the genome that may be junk DNA.
Spurious transcription is very common in eukaryotes, especially those with large genomes that might contain a lot of junk DNA. Some scientists claim that if a transcript has not been assigned to a known gene then the default assumption must be that it is junk RNA until it has been shown to be functional. This would mean that much of the transcriptome in species with large genomes is probably junk RNA. (See Non-coding RNA)
The transcriptome includes the transcripts of protein-coding genes (mRNA plus introns) as well as the transcripts of non-coding genes (functional RNAs plus introns).
- Ribosomal RNA/rRNA: Usually the most abundant RNA in the transcriptome.
- Long non-coding RNA/lncRNA: Non-coding RNA transcripts that are more than 200 nucleotides long. Members of this group comprise the largest fraction of the non-coding transcriptome other than introns. It is not known how many of these transcripts are functional and how many are junk RNA.
- transfer RNA/tRNA
- micro RNA/miRNA: 19-24 nucleotides (nt) long. Micro RNAs up- or downregulate expression levels of mRNAs by the process of RNA interference at the post-transcriptional level.
- small interfering RNA/siRNA: 20-24 nt
- small nucleolar RNA/snoRNA
- Piwi-interacting RNA/piRNA: 24-31 nt. They interact with Piwi proteins of the Argonaute family and have a function in targeting and cleaving transposons.
- enhancer RNA/eRNA:
Scope of study
In the human genome, all genes get transcribed into RNA because that's how the molecular gene is defined. (See Gene.) The transcriptome consists of coding regions of mRNA plus non-coding UTRs, introns, non-coding RNAs, and spurious non-functional transcripts.
Several factors render the content of the transcriptome difficult to establish. These include alternative splicing, RNA editing and alternative transcription among others. Additionally, transcriptome techniques are capable of capturing transcription occurring in a sample at a specific time point, although the content of the transcriptome can change during differentiation. The main aims of transcriptomics are the following: "catalogue all species of transcript, including mRNAs, non-coding RNAs and small RNAs; to determine the transcriptional structure of genes, in terms of their start sites, 5′ and 3′ ends, splicing patterns and other post-transcriptional modifications; and to quantify the changing expression levels of each transcript during development and under different conditions".
The term can be applied to the total set of transcripts in a given organism, or to the specific subset of transcripts present in a particular cell type. Unlike the genome, which is roughly fixed for a given cell line (excluding mutations), the transcriptome can vary with external environmental conditions. Because it includes all mRNA transcripts in the cell, the transcriptome reflects the genes that are being actively expressed at any given time, with the exception of mRNA degradation phenomena such as transcriptional attenuation. The study of transcriptomics, (which includes expression profiling, splice variant analysis etc.), examines the expression level of RNAs in a given cell population, often focusing on mRNA, but sometimes including others such as tRNAs and sRNAs.
Methods of construction
Transcriptomics is the quantitative science that encompasses the assignment of a list of strings ("reads") to the object ("transcripts" in the genome). To calculate the expression strength, the density of reads corresponding to each object is counted. Initially, transcriptomes were analyzed and studied using expressed sequence tags libraries and serial and cap analysis of gene expression (SAGE).
Currently, the two main transcriptomics techniques include DNA microarrays and RNA-Seq. Both techniques require RNA isolation through RNA extraction techniques, followed by its separation from other cellular components and enrichment of mRNA.
There are two general methods of inferring transcriptome sequences. One approach maps sequence reads onto a reference genome, either of the organism itself (whose transcriptome is being studied) or of a closely related species. The other approach, de novo transcriptome assembly, uses software to infer transcripts directly from short sequence reads and is used in organisms with genomes that are not sequenced.
DNA microarrays
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The first transcriptome studies were based on microarray techniques (also known as DNA chips). Microarrays consist of thin glass layers with spots on which oligonucleotides, known as "probes" are arrayed; each spot contains a known DNA sequence.
When performing microarray analyses, mRNA is collected from a control and an experimental sample, the latter usually representative of a disease. The RNA of interest is converted to cDNA to increase its stability and marked with fluorophores of two colors, usually green and red, for the two groups. The cDNA is spread onto the surface of the microarray where it hybridizes with oligonucleotides on the chip and a laser is used to scan. The fluorescence intensity on each spot of the microarray corresponds to the level of gene expression and based on the color of the fluorophores selected, it can be determined which of the samples exhibits higher levels of the mRNA of interest.
One microarray usually contains enough oligonucleotides to represent all known genes; however, data obtained using microarrays does not provide information about unknown genes. During the 2010s, microarrays were almost completely replaced by next-generation techniques that are based on DNA sequencing.
RNA sequencing
RNA sequencing is a next-generation sequencing technology; as such it requires only a small amount of RNA and no previous knowledge of the genome. It allows for both qualitative and quantitative analysis of RNA transcripts, the former allowing discovery of new transcripts and the latter a measure of relative quantities for transcripts in a sample.
The three main steps of sequencing transcriptomes of any biological samples include RNA purification, the synthesis of an RNA or cDNA library and sequencing the library. The RNA purification process is different for short and long RNAs. This step is usually followed by an assessment of RNA quality, with the purpose of avoiding contaminants such as DNA or technical contaminants related to sample processing. RNA quality is measured using UV spectrometry with an absorbance peak of 260 nm. RNA integrity can also be analyzed quantitatively comparing the ratio and intensity of 28S RNA to 18S RNA reported in the RNA Integrity Number (RIN) score. Since mRNA is the species of interest and it represents only 3% of its total content, the RNA sample should be treated to remove rRNA and tRNA and tissue-specific RNA transcripts.
The step of library preparation with the aim of producing short cDNA fragments, begins with RNA fragmentation to transcripts in length between 50 and 300 base pairs. Fragmentation can be enzymatic (RNA endonucleases), chemical (trismagnesium salt buffer, chemical hydrolysis) or mechanical (sonication, nebulisation).Reverse transcription is used to convert the RNA templates into cDNA and three priming methods can be used to achieve it, including oligo-DT, using random primers or ligating special adaptor oligos.
Single-cell transcriptomics
Transcription can also be studied at the level of individual cells by single-cell transcriptomics. Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) is a recently developed technique that allows the analysis of the transcriptome of single cells, including bacteria. With single-cell transcriptomics, subpopulations of cell types that constitute the tissue of interest are also taken into consideration. This approach allows to identify whether changes in experimental samples are due to phenotypic cellular changes as opposed to proliferation, with which a specific cell type might be overexpressed in the sample. Additionally, when assessing cellular progression through differentiation, average expression profiles are only able to order cells by time rather than their stage of development and are consequently unable to show trends in gene expression levels specific to certain stages. Single-cell trarnscriptomic techniques have been used to characterize rare cell populations such as circulating tumor cells, cancer stem cells in solid tumors, and embryonic stem cells (ESCs) in mammalian blastocysts.
Although there are no standardized techniques for single-cell transcriptomics, several steps need to be undertaken. The first step includes cell isolation, which can be performed using low- and high-throughput techniques. This is followed by a qPCR step and then single-cell RNAseq where the RNA of interest is converted into cDNA. Newer developments in single-cell transcriptomics allow for tissue and sub-cellular localization preservation through cryo-sectioning thin slices of tissues and sequencing the transcriptome in each slice. Another technique allows the visualization of single transcripts under a microscope while preserving the spatial information of each individual cell where they are expressed.
Analysis
A number of organism-specific transcriptome databases have been constructed and annotated to aid in the identification of genes that are differentially expressed in distinct cell populations.
RNA-seq is emerging (2013) as the method of choice for measuring transcriptomes of organisms, though the older technique of DNA microarrays is still used. RNA-seq measures the transcription of a specific gene by converting long RNAs into a library of cDNA fragments. The cDNA fragments are then sequenced using high-throughput sequencing technology and aligned to a reference genome or transcriptome which is then used to create an expression profile of the genes.
Applications
Mammals
The transcriptomes of stem cells and cancer cells are of particular interest to researchers who seek to understand the processes of cellular differentiation and carcinogenesis. A pipeline using RNA-seq or gene array data can be used to track genetic changes occurring in stem and precursor cells and requires at least three independent gene expression data from the former cell type and mature cells.
Analysis of the transcriptomes of human oocytes and embryos is used to understand the molecular mechanisms and signaling pathways controlling early embryonic development, and could theoretically be a powerful tool in making proper embryo selection in in vitro fertilisation.[citation needed] Analyses of the transcriptome content of the placenta in the first-trimester of pregnancy in in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer (IVT-ET) revealed differences in genetic expression which are associated with higher frequency of adverse perinatal outcomes. Such insight can be used to optimize the practice. Transcriptome analyses can also be used to optimize cryopreservation of oocytes, by lowering injuries associated with the process.
Transcriptomics is an emerging and continually growing field in biomarker discovery for use in assessing the safety of drugs or chemical risk assessment.
Transcriptomes may also be used to infer phylogenetic relationships among individuals or to detect evolutionary patterns of transcriptome conservation.
Transcriptome analyses were used to discover the incidence of antisense transcription, their role in gene expression through interaction with surrounding genes and their abundance in different chromosomes. RNA-seq was also used to show how RNA isoforms, transcripts stemming from the same gene but with different structures, can produce complex phenotypes from limited genomes.
Plants
Transcriptome analysis have been used to study the evolution and diversification process of plant species. In 2014, the 1000 Plant Genomes Project was completed in which the transcriptomes of 1,124 plant species from the families viridiplantae, glaucophyta and rhodophyta were sequenced. The protein coding sequences were subsequently compared to infer phylogenetic relationships between plants and to characterize the time of their diversification in the process of evolution. Transcriptome studies have been used to characterize and quantify gene expression in mature pollen. Genes involved in cell wall metabolism and cytoskeleton were found to be overexpressed. Transcriptome approaches also allowed to track changes in gene expression through different developmental stages of pollen, ranging from microspore to mature pollen grains; additionally such stages could be compared across species of different plants including Arabidopsis, rice and tobacco.
Relation to other ome fields
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Similar to other -ome based technologies, analysis of the transcriptome allows for an unbiased approach when validating hypotheses experimentally. This approach also allows for the discovery of novel mediators in signaling pathways. As with other -omics based technologies, the transcriptome can be analyzed within the scope of a multiomics approach. It is complementary to metabolomics but contrary to proteomics, a direct association between a transcript and metabolite cannot be established.
There are several -ome fields that can be seen as subcategories of the transcriptome. The exome differs from the transcriptome in that it includes only those RNA molecules found in a specified cell population, and usually includes the amount or concentration of each RNA molecule in addition to the molecular identities. Additionally, the transcritpome also differs from the translatome, which is the set of RNAs undergoing translation.
The term meiome is used in functional genomics to describe the meiotic transcriptome or the set of RNA transcripts produced during the process of meiosis. Meiosis is a key feature of sexually reproducing eukaryotes, and involves the pairing of homologous chromosome, synapse and recombination. Since meiosis in most organisms occurs in a short time period, meiotic transcript profiling is difficult due to the challenge of isolation (or enrichment) of meiotic cells (meiocytes). As with transcriptome analyses, the meiome can be studied at a whole-genome level using large-scale transcriptomic techniques. The meiome has been well-characterized in mammal and yeast systems and somewhat less extensively characterized in plants.
The thanatotranscriptome consists of all RNA transcripts that continue to be expressed or that start getting re-expressed in internal organs of a dead body 24–48 hours following death. Some genes include those that are inhibited after fetal development. If the thanatotranscriptome is related to the process of programmed cell death (apoptosis), it can be referred to as the apoptotic thanatotranscriptome. Analyses of the thanatotranscriptome are used in forensic medicine.
eQTL mapping can be used to complement genomics with transcriptomics; genetic variants at DNA level and gene expression measures at RNA level.
Relation to proteome
The transcriptome can be seen as a subset of the proteome, that is, the entire set of proteins expressed by a genome.
However, the analysis of relative mRNA expression levels can be complicated by the fact that relatively small changes in mRNA expression can produce large changes in the total amount of the corresponding protein present in the cell. One analysis method, known as gene set enrichment analysis, identifies coregulated gene networks rather than individual genes that are up- or down-regulated in different cell populations.[1]
Although microarray studies can reveal the relative amounts of different mRNAs in the cell, levels of mRNA are not directly proportional to the expression level of the proteins they code for. The number of protein molecules synthesized using a given mRNA molecule as a template is highly dependent on translation-initiation features of the mRNA sequence; in particular, the ability of the translation initiation sequence is a key determinant in the recruiting of ribosomes for protein translation.
Transcriptome databases
See also
- Functional genomics
- Gene expression
- List of omics topics in biology
- Metabolome
- Serial analysis of gene expression
- Transcriptomics technologies
- Translatome
- Transpogene
- Weighted gene co-expression network analysis
Notes
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References
- Cellerino, A; Sanguanini, M (2018), Transcriptome Analysis: Introduction and Examples from the Neurosciences, doi:10.1007/978-88-7642-642-1, ISBN 978-88-7642-641-4
Further reading
- ^ Subramanian A, Tamayo P, Mootha VK, Mukherjee S, Ebert BL, Gillette MA, Paulovich A, Pomeroy SL, Golub TR, Lander ES, Mesirov JP. (2005). Gene set enrichment analysis: a knowledge-based approach for interpreting genome-wide expression profiles. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 102(43):15545-50.
- ^ Laule O, Hirsch-Hoffmann M, Hruz T, Gruissem W, and P Zimmermann. (2006) Web-based analysis of the mouse transcriptome using Genevestigator. BMC Bioinformatics 7:311
- ^ Assou, S.; Boumela, I.; Haouzi, D.; Anahory, T.; Dechaud, H.; De Vos, J.; Hamamah, S. (2010). "Dynamic changes in gene expression during human early embryo development: From fundamental aspects to clinical applications". Human Reproduction Update. 17 (2): 272–290. doi:10.1093/humupd/dmq036. PMC 3189516. PMID 20716614.
- ^ Ogorodnikov, A; Kargapolova, Y; Danckwardt, S. (2016). "Processing and transcriptome expansion at the mRNA 3′ end in health and disease: finding the right end". Eur J Physiol. 468 (6): 993–1012. doi:10.1007/s00424-016-1828-3. PMC 4893057. PMID 27220521.
The transcriptome is the set of all RNA transcripts including coding and non coding in an individual or a population of cells The term can also sometimes be used to refer to all RNAs or just mRNA depending on the particular experiment The term transcriptome is a portmanteau of the words transcript and genome it is associated with the process of transcript production during the biological process of transcription The early stages of transcriptome annotations began with cDNA libraries published in the 1980s Subsequently the advent of high throughput technology led to faster and more efficient ways of obtaining data about the transcriptome Two biological techniques are used to study the transcriptome namely DNA microarray a hybridization based technique and RNA seq a sequence based approach RNA seq is the preferred method and has been the dominant transcriptomics technique since the 2010s Single cell transcriptomics allows tracking of transcript changes over time within individual cells Data obtained from the transcriptome is used in research to gain insight into processes such as cellular differentiation carcinogenesis transcription regulation and biomarker discovery among others Transcriptome obtained data also finds applications in establishing phylogenetic relationships during the process of evolution and in in vitro fertilization The transcriptome is closely related to other ome based biological fields of study it is complementary to the proteome and the metabolome and encompasses the translatome exome meiome and thanatotranscriptome which can be seen as ome fields studying specific types of RNA transcripts There are quantifiable and conserved relationships between the Transcriptome and other omes and Transcriptomics data can be used effectively to predict other molecular species such as metabolites There are numerous publicly available transcriptome databases Etymology and historyThe word transcriptome is a portmanteau of the words transcript and genome It appeared along with other neologisms formed using the suffixes ome and omics to denote all studies conducted on a genome wide scale in the fields of life sciences and technology As such transcriptome and transcriptomics were one of the first words to emerge along with genome and proteome The first study to present a case of a collection of a cDNA library for silk moth mRNA was published in 1979 The first seminal study to mention and investigate the transcriptome of an organism was published in 1997 and it described 60 633 transcripts expressed in S cerevisiae using serial analysis of gene expression SAGE With the rise of high throughput technologies and bioinformatics and the subsequent increased computational power it became increasingly efficient and easy to characterize and analyze enormous amount of data Attempts to characterize the transcriptome became more prominent with the advent of automated DNA sequencing during the 1980s During the 1990s expressed sequence tag sequencing was used to identify genes and their fragments This was followed by techniques such as serial analysis of gene expression SAGE cap analysis of gene expression CAGE and massively parallel signature sequencing MPSS TranscriptionThe transcriptome encompasses all the ribonucleic acid RNA transcripts present in a given organism or experimental sample RNA is the main carrier of genetic information that is responsible for the process of converting DNA into an organism s phenotype A gene can give rise to a single stranded messenger RNA mRNA through a molecular process known as transcription this mRNA is complementary to the strand of DNA it originated from The enzyme RNA polymerase II attaches to the template DNA strand and catalyzes the addition of ribonucleotides to the 3 end of the growing sequence of the mRNA transcript In order to initiate its function RNA polymerase II needs to recognize a promoter sequence located upstream 5 of the gene In eukaryotes this process is mediated by transcription factors most notably Transcription factor II D TFIID which recognizes the TATA box and aids in the positioning of RNA polymerase at the appropriate start site To finish the production of the RNA transcript termination takes place usually several hundred nuclecotides away from the termination sequence and cleavage takes place This process occurs in the nucleus of a cell along with RNA processing by which mRNA molecules are capped spliced and polyadenylated to increase their stability before being subsequently taken to the cytoplasm The mRNA gives rise to proteins through the process of translation that takes place in ribosomes Types of RNA transcriptsAlmost all functional transcripts are derived from known genes The only exceptions are a small number of transcripts that might play a direct role in regulating gene expression near the prompters of known genes See Enhancer RNA Gene occupy most of prokaryotic genomes so most of their genomes are transcribed Many eukaryotic genomes are very large and known genes may take up only a fraction of the genome In mammals for example known genes only account for 40 50 of the genome Nevertheless identified transcripts often map to a much larger fraction of the genome suggesting that the transcriptome contains spurious transcripts that do not come from genes Some of these transcripts are known to be non functional because they map to transcribed pseudogenes or degenerative transposons and viruses Others map to unidentified regions of the genome that may be junk DNA Spurious transcription is very common in eukaryotes especially those with large genomes that might contain a lot of junk DNA Some scientists claim that if a transcript has not been assigned to a known gene then the default assumption must be that it is junk RNA until it has been shown to be functional This would mean that much of the transcriptome in species with large genomes is probably junk RNA See Non coding RNA The transcriptome includes the transcripts of protein coding genes mRNA plus introns as well as the transcripts of non coding genes functional RNAs plus introns Ribosomal RNA rRNA Usually the most abundant RNA in the transcriptome Long non coding RNA lncRNA Non coding RNA transcripts that are more than 200 nucleotides long Members of this group comprise the largest fraction of the non coding transcriptome other than introns It is not known how many of these transcripts are functional and how many are junk RNA transfer RNA tRNA micro RNA miRNA 19 24 nucleotides nt long Micro RNAs up or downregulate expression levels of mRNAs by the process of RNA interference at the post transcriptional level small interfering RNA siRNA 20 24 nt small nucleolar RNA snoRNA Piwi interacting RNA piRNA 24 31 nt They interact with Piwi proteins of the Argonaute family and have a function in targeting and cleaving transposons enhancer RNA eRNA Scope of studyIn the human genome all genes get transcribed into RNA because that s how the molecular gene is defined See Gene The transcriptome consists of coding regions of mRNA plus non coding UTRs introns non coding RNAs and spurious non functional transcripts Several factors render the content of the transcriptome difficult to establish These include alternative splicing RNA editing and alternative transcription among others Additionally transcriptome techniques are capable of capturing transcription occurring in a sample at a specific time point although the content of the transcriptome can change during differentiation The main aims of transcriptomics are the following catalogue all species of transcript including mRNAs non coding RNAs and small RNAs to determine the transcriptional structure of genes in terms of their start sites 5 and 3 ends splicing patterns and other post transcriptional modifications and to quantify the changing expression levels of each transcript during development and under different conditions The term can be applied to the total set of transcripts in a given organism or to the specific subset of transcripts present in a particular cell type Unlike the genome which is roughly fixed for a given cell line excluding mutations the transcriptome can vary with external environmental conditions Because it includes all mRNA transcripts in the cell the transcriptome reflects the genes that are being actively expressed at any given time with the exception of mRNA degradation phenomena such as transcriptional attenuation The study of transcriptomics which includes expression profiling splice variant analysis etc examines the expression level of RNAs in a given cell population often focusing on mRNA but sometimes including others such as tRNAs and sRNAs Methods of constructionTranscriptomics is the quantitative science that encompasses the assignment of a list of strings reads to the object transcripts in the genome To calculate the expression strength the density of reads corresponding to each object is counted Initially transcriptomes were analyzed and studied using expressed sequence tags libraries and serial and cap analysis of gene expression SAGE Currently the two main transcriptomics techniques include DNA microarrays and RNA Seq Both techniques require RNA isolation through RNA extraction techniques followed by its separation from other cellular components and enrichment of mRNA There are two general methods of inferring transcriptome sequences One approach maps sequence reads onto a reference genome either of the organism itself whose transcriptome is being studied or of a closely related species The other approach de novo transcriptome assembly uses software to infer transcripts directly from short sequence reads and is used in organisms with genomes that are not sequenced DNA microarrays DNA microarray used to detect gene expression in human left and mouse right samples The first transcriptome studies were based on microarray techniques also known as DNA chips Microarrays consist of thin glass layers with spots on which oligonucleotides known as probes are arrayed each spot contains a known DNA sequence When performing microarray analyses mRNA is collected from a control and an experimental sample the latter usually representative of a disease The RNA of interest is converted to cDNA to increase its stability and marked with fluorophores of two colors usually green and red for the two groups The cDNA is spread onto the surface of the microarray where it hybridizes with oligonucleotides on the chip and a laser is used to scan The fluorescence intensity on each spot of the microarray corresponds to the level of gene expression and based on the color of the fluorophores selected it can be determined which of the samples exhibits higher levels of the mRNA of interest One microarray usually contains enough oligonucleotides to represent all known genes however data obtained using microarrays does not provide information about unknown genes During the 2010s microarrays were almost completely replaced by next generation techniques that are based on DNA sequencing RNA sequencing RNA sequencing is a next generation sequencing technology as such it requires only a small amount of RNA and no previous knowledge of the genome It allows for both qualitative and quantitative analysis of RNA transcripts the former allowing discovery of new transcripts and the latter a measure of relative quantities for transcripts in a sample The three main steps of sequencing transcriptomes of any biological samples include RNA purification the synthesis of an RNA or cDNA library and sequencing the library The RNA purification process is different for short and long RNAs This step is usually followed by an assessment of RNA quality with the purpose of avoiding contaminants such as DNA or technical contaminants related to sample processing RNA quality is measured using UV spectrometry with an absorbance peak of 260 nm RNA integrity can also be analyzed quantitatively comparing the ratio and intensity of 28S RNA to 18S RNA reported in the RNA Integrity Number RIN score Since mRNA is the species of interest and it represents only 3 of its total content the RNA sample should be treated to remove rRNA and tRNA and tissue specific RNA transcripts The step of library preparation with the aim of producing short cDNA fragments begins with RNA fragmentation to transcripts in length between 50 and 300 base pairs Fragmentation can be enzymatic RNA endonucleases chemical trismagnesium salt buffer chemical hydrolysis or mechanical sonication nebulisation Reverse transcription is used to convert the RNA templates into cDNA and three priming methods can be used to achieve it including oligo DT using random primers or ligating special adaptor oligos Single cell transcriptomics Transcription can also be studied at the level of individual cells by single cell transcriptomics Single cell RNA sequencing scRNA seq is a recently developed technique that allows the analysis of the transcriptome of single cells including bacteria With single cell transcriptomics subpopulations of cell types that constitute the tissue of interest are also taken into consideration This approach allows to identify whether changes in experimental samples are due to phenotypic cellular changes as opposed to proliferation with which a specific cell type might be overexpressed in the sample Additionally when assessing cellular progression through differentiation average expression profiles are only able to order cells by time rather than their stage of development and are consequently unable to show trends in gene expression levels specific to certain stages Single cell trarnscriptomic techniques have been used to characterize rare cell populations such as circulating tumor cells cancer stem cells in solid tumors and embryonic stem cells ESCs in mammalian blastocysts Although there are no standardized techniques for single cell transcriptomics several steps need to be undertaken The first step includes cell isolation which can be performed using low and high throughput techniques This is followed by a qPCR step and then single cell RNAseq where the RNA of interest is converted into cDNA Newer developments in single cell transcriptomics allow for tissue and sub cellular localization preservation through cryo sectioning thin slices of tissues and sequencing the transcriptome in each slice Another technique allows the visualization of single transcripts under a microscope while preserving the spatial information of each individual cell where they are expressed AnalysisA number of organism specific transcriptome databases have been constructed and annotated to aid in the identification of genes that are differentially expressed in distinct cell populations RNA seq is emerging 2013 as the method of choice for measuring transcriptomes of organisms though the older technique of DNA microarrays is still used RNA seq measures the transcription of a specific gene by converting long RNAs into a library of cDNA fragments The cDNA fragments are then sequenced using high throughput sequencing technology and aligned to a reference genome or transcriptome which is then used to create an expression profile of the genes ApplicationsMammals The transcriptomes of stem cells and cancer cells are of particular interest to researchers who seek to understand the processes of cellular differentiation and carcinogenesis A pipeline using RNA seq or gene array data can be used to track genetic changes occurring in stem and precursor cells and requires at least three independent gene expression data from the former cell type and mature cells Analysis of the transcriptomes of human oocytes and embryos is used to understand the molecular mechanisms and signaling pathways controlling early embryonic development and could theoretically be a powerful tool in making proper embryo selection in in vitro fertilisation citation needed Analyses of the transcriptome content of the placenta in the first trimester of pregnancy in in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer IVT ET revealed differences in genetic expression which are associated with higher frequency of adverse perinatal outcomes Such insight can be used to optimize the practice Transcriptome analyses can also be used to optimize cryopreservation of oocytes by lowering injuries associated with the process Transcriptomics is an emerging and continually growing field in biomarker discovery for use in assessing the safety of drugs or chemical risk assessment Transcriptomes may also be used to infer phylogenetic relationships among individuals or to detect evolutionary patterns of transcriptome conservation Transcriptome analyses were used to discover the incidence of antisense transcription their role in gene expression through interaction with surrounding genes and their abundance in different chromosomes RNA seq was also used to show how RNA isoforms transcripts stemming from the same gene but with different structures can produce complex phenotypes from limited genomes Plants Transcriptome analysis have been used to study the evolution and diversification process of plant species In 2014 the 1000 Plant Genomes Project was completed in which the transcriptomes of 1 124 plant species from the families viridiplantae glaucophyta and rhodophyta were sequenced The protein coding sequences were subsequently compared to infer phylogenetic relationships between plants and to characterize the time of their diversification in the process of evolution Transcriptome studies have been used to characterize and quantify gene expression in mature pollen Genes involved in cell wall metabolism and cytoskeleton were found to be overexpressed Transcriptome approaches also allowed to track changes in gene expression through different developmental stages of pollen ranging from microspore to mature pollen grains additionally such stages could be compared across species of different plants including Arabidopsis rice and tobacco Relation to other ome fieldsGeneral schema showing the relationships of the genome transcriptome proteome and metabolome lipidome Similar to other ome based technologies analysis of the transcriptome allows for an unbiased approach when validating hypotheses experimentally This approach also allows for the discovery of novel mediators in signaling pathways As with other omics based technologies the transcriptome can be analyzed within the scope of a multiomics approach It is complementary to metabolomics but contrary to proteomics a direct association between a transcript and metabolite cannot be established There are several ome fields that can be seen as subcategories of the transcriptome The exome differs from the transcriptome in that it includes only those RNA molecules found in a specified cell population and usually includes the amount or concentration of each RNA molecule in addition to the molecular identities Additionally the transcritpome also differs from the translatome which is the set of RNAs undergoing translation The term meiome is used in functional genomics to describe the meiotic transcriptome or the set of RNA transcripts produced during the process of meiosis Meiosis is a key feature of sexually reproducing eukaryotes and involves the pairing of homologous chromosome synapse and recombination Since meiosis in most organisms occurs in a short time period meiotic transcript profiling is difficult due to the challenge of isolation or enrichment of meiotic cells meiocytes As with transcriptome analyses the meiome can be studied at a whole genome level using large scale transcriptomic techniques The meiome has been well characterized in mammal and yeast systems and somewhat less extensively characterized in plants The thanatotranscriptome consists of all RNA transcripts that continue to be expressed or that start getting re expressed in internal organs of a dead body 24 48 hours following death Some genes include those that are inhibited after fetal development If the thanatotranscriptome is related to the process of programmed cell death apoptosis it can be referred to as the apoptotic thanatotranscriptome Analyses of the thanatotranscriptome are used in forensic medicine eQTL mapping can be used to complement genomics with transcriptomics genetic variants at DNA level and gene expression measures at RNA level Relation to proteome The transcriptome can be seen as a subset of the proteome that is the entire set of proteins expressed by a genome However the analysis of relative mRNA expression levels can be complicated by the fact that relatively small changes in mRNA expression can produce large changes in the total amount of the corresponding protein present in the cell One analysis method known as gene set enrichment analysis identifies coregulated gene networks rather than individual genes that are up or down regulated in different cell populations 1 Although microarray studies can reveal the relative amounts of different mRNAs in the cell levels of mRNA are not directly proportional to the expression level of the proteins they code for The number of protein molecules synthesized using a given mRNA molecule as a template is highly dependent on translation initiation features of the mRNA sequence in particular the ability of the translation initiation sequence is a key determinant in the recruiting of ribosomes for protein translation Transcriptome databasesEnsembl 2 OmicTools 3 Transcriptome Browser 4 ArrayExpress 5 See alsoPortals BiologyScienceTechnology Functional genomics Gene expression List of omics topics in biology Metabolome Serial analysis of gene expression Transcriptomics technologies Translatome Transpogene Weighted gene co expression network analysisNotesWang Zhong Gerstein Mark Snyder Michael January 2009 RNA Seq a revolutionary tool for transcriptomics Nature Reviews Genetics 10 1 57 63 doi 10 1038 nrg2484 PMC 2949280 PMID 19015660 Cavicchioli Maria Vittoria 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biomedical sciences Briefings in Bioinformatics 19 2 286 302 doi 10 1093 bib bbw114 PMC 6018996 PMID 27881428 Schwanhausser Bjorn et al May 2011 Global quantification of mammalian gene expression control PDF Nature 473 7347 337 342 Bibcode 2011Natur 473 337S doi 10 1038 nature10098 PMID 21593866 S2CID 205224972 ReferencesCellerino A Sanguanini M 2018 Transcriptome Analysis Introduction and Examples from the Neurosciences doi 10 1007 978 88 7642 642 1 ISBN 978 88 7642 641 4Further reading Subramanian A Tamayo P Mootha VK Mukherjee S Ebert BL Gillette MA Paulovich A Pomeroy SL Golub TR Lander ES Mesirov JP 2005 Gene set enrichment analysis a knowledge based approach for interpreting genome wide expression profiles Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 102 43 15545 50 Laule O Hirsch Hoffmann M Hruz T Gruissem W and P Zimmermann 2006 Web based analysis of the mouse transcriptome using Genevestigator BMC Bioinformatics 7 311 Assou S Boumela I Haouzi D Anahory T Dechaud H De Vos J Hamamah S 2010 Dynamic changes in gene expression during human early embryo development From fundamental aspects to clinical applications Human Reproduction Update 17 2 272 290 doi 10 1093 humupd dmq036 PMC 3189516 PMID 20716614 Ogorodnikov A Kargapolova Y Danckwardt S 2016 Processing and transcriptome expansion at the mRNA 3 end in health and disease finding the right end Eur J Physiol 468 6 993 1012 doi 10 1007 s00424 016 1828 3 PMC 4893057 PMID 27220521