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Article Abstract

Genome-wide spatial long-read approaches often lack single-cell resolution and yield limited read lengths. Here, we introduce spatial ISOform sequencing (Spl-ISO-Seq), which reveals exons and polyadenylation sites with near-single-cell resolution. Spl-ISO-Seq selects long cDNAs and doubles to triples read lengths compared to standard preparations. Adding a highly specific software tool (Spl-ISOquant) and comparing human post-mortem pre-puberty (8-11 years) to post-puberty (16-19 years) visual cortex samples, we find that cortex harbors stronger splicing and poly(A)-site regulation than white matter. However, oligodendrocyte regulation is stronger in white matter. Among cortical layers, layer 4 has the most developmentally-regulated splicing changes in excitatory neurons and in poly(A) sites. We also find repeat elements downstream of developmentally-regulated layer 4 exons. Overall, alternative splicing changes are linked to post-synaptic structure and function. These results root developmental splicing changes during puberty in specific layers and cell types. More generally, our technologies enable exciting observations for any complex tissue.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12397408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63301-9DOI Listing

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