News Release

GenSAT (Gene Expression Nervous System Atlas) project announced

Unprecedented genetic access to brain provided by Rockefeller University scientists

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Rockefeller University

For scientists studying the brain, this week's Nature announces a remarkable new map describing previously uncharted territory, plus the means of exploring the new horizons for themselves. Rockefeller University scientists led by Nat Heintz, Ph.D., and Mary Beth Hatten, Ph.D., are well under way on a genetic atlas of the mammalian brain that provides unprecedented access to central nervous system regions, cell classes and pathways.

"Researchers studying degenerative and developmental diseases from Parkinson's and Huntington's to autism and epilepsy now will have genetic access to the brain without all the effort required of doing their own molecular genetics from scratch," says Heintz. "Gensat will advance the experimentation that can be done based on the information provided in the atlas; to me this is the key contribution of our project."

The project, called Gensat (Gene Expression Nervous System Atlas) employs a method for manipulation of "bacterial artificial chromosomes" or BACs, developed by project co-leader Heintz, professor and head of the Laboratory of Molecular Biology at Rockefeller and an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. BACs in an early form provided the backbone of The Human Genome Project; Heintz discovered how to manipulate them by inserting, changing or deleting parts of the large gene sequences composing them. Once created, the modified BACs for individual genes are inserted into the genome of laboratory mice to assess gene expression.

The BAC technology provides unparalleled insight because it identifies the actual cell types in the brain in which individual genes express themselves. Heintz also added a reporter gene to the BACs so that cells with the selected gene activity glow bright green. Many new brain cell types or subtypes have been discovered in this project as a result of the potent tool. (Traditional methods of genetic analysis such as in situ hybridization cannot distinguish among cell types for gene expression, and therefore are not as powerful.)

Gensat comes with the accoutrements necessary for scientists anywhere to further improve our knowledge of the brain and its diseases. Gensat is a fully public, searchable database of gene expression in all central nervous system cell types for individual genes. What's more, Gensat provides the tools (BAC vectors and transgenic mice) used in the project for researchers interested in following up on new disease-based insights revealed in the atlas. One hundred-fifty genes are analyzed in the new database at www.gensat.org, with 100 more genes scheduled for posting soon.

"We are providing more information in our database than has ever been known in the central nervous system," says Hatten, professor and head of the Laboratory of Developmental Neurobiology at Rockefeller. "There isn't a single gene among the 150 currently on our public atlas that has been studied in the range of detail that we have provided. If biologists tend to explore things locally in great detail, we've started examining a global economy of the central nervous system."

Gensat analyzes up to five genes per week in a high throughput laboratory space provided by The Rockefeller University. Heintz and Hatten plan to analyze gene expression in all central nervous system cell types for 250-300 genes per year.

"These two committed scientists, along with their formidable research team, are doing precisely what researchers should do with the information generated by the whole genome sequencing projects," says Rockefeller University President Paul Nurse. "Their visionary efforts are expanding the possibilities for research and cures in neurobiology."

Landmarks in the brain

Maps are valuable when they exhibit distinguishing features of the landscape. The same is true for Gensat. When the two Rockefeller scientists conceived the project four years ago, Hatten knew she would need to put her considerable expertise in imaging the brain to work if Gensat was going to succeed. Today, the Gensat project recreates for scientists and students the experience of sitting down to look at brain specimens at a microscope. Seeing genes expressed in every cell type in the brain, and viewing that expression in a traditional, anatomical format, provide researchers with more insights about the function of genes.

To achieve this result, the project's automated microscope records mouse brain specimens for every gene in the atlas at three developmental stages. The images are captured at high resolution, checked for accuracy by several of the 20 researchers involved with the project, annotated and prepared for inclusion in the database.

The organizational challenge alone for such a large-scale project is impressive. But Heintz and Hatten faced more than an organizational challenge when they started out. The means of displaying high-resolution digital images on the scale they envisioned simply did not exist.

"It was like going into a bike shop and designing a bike that no one has ever imagined before," says Hatten. "All the components were available, but we had to put them together and design the computing systems to run them for the first time."

The lead duo were fortunate to attract gifted scientists and a programmer to the project, without whom, they would never have achieved all the significant technical infrastructure and refinements required at every stage. The scientists include Shiaoching Gong, Chen Zheng, Martin Doughty, Kasia Losos and programmer Nick Didkovsky. Heintz and Hatten describe this group as "some of the most talented young researchers we've ever worked with." Remarkably, Didkovsky, without prior exposure to science, worked closely with Hatten to build an operating system for Gensat from the ground up.

The National Institute of Neurologic Disease and Stroke (NINDS), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), had the foresight to generously fund the Gensat Project in the context of their ongoing efforts to create a gene expression atlas of the nervous system, well before the tools and systems required to conduct the project had been refined. Their support during the development phase of this project was crucial in its realization.

Heintz and Hatten also have relied on the Rockefeller University's tradition of supporting researchers undertaking risky, but potentially important science.

"Without the university's support in addition to that of the NIH, this project would have been an uphill effort," says Hatten. "Rockefeller has funded all computer systems, a full-time software programmer, as well as found precious lab space for the researchers working together on this project."

"A lot of scientists form companies," says Heintz. "We thought about that, too, but we were fortunate enough to have the strong support of the NIH, our home institution, The Rockefeller University, and Howard Hughes Medical Institute. Now, we are free to allow this valuable information and the tools we created to be shared with scientists everywhere, not just reserved for those with the financial resources to buy data and tools." The NINDS and the university have helped fulfill Heintz and Hatten's goal of keeping this project truly public.

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