Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants

Animal nutrition and toxin deterrence rely on the ability to taste, which occurs through columnar taste cells clustered within taste buds. Taste buds in mammals are located within specialized tissues, called papillae. However, taste buds in fish and amphibians, such as axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum)...

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Main Authors: Lauren Marazzi, Priya Kohli, Deborah Eastman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-10-01
Series:Data in Brief
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920310209
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spelling doaj-2bb59aa8f9814f0a874ed2fe7bc57c472020-11-25T03:33:54ZengElsevierData in Brief2352-34092020-10-0132106126Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explantsLauren Marazzi0Priya Kohli1Deborah Eastman2Department of Biology, Connecticut College, United StatesDepartment of Math and Statistics, Connecticut College, United StatesDepartment of Biology, Connecticut College, United States; Corresponding author.Animal nutrition and toxin deterrence rely on the ability to taste, which occurs through columnar taste cells clustered within taste buds. Taste buds in mammals are located within specialized tissues, called papillae. However, taste buds in fish and amphibians, such as axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum), are not housed in papillae, rather they are embedded within the pharyngeal epithelium. This simplified tissue level organization, along with the ability of cultured oropharyngeal explants from early embryos to produce taste buds on the same time-line as embryos, make the axolotl an excellent model to identify molecules specifically involved in taste bud cell differentiation. We performed de novo transcriptomic analysis on RNA sequences from three different stages of oropharyngeal explants: stages 37/38, 39, and 41. RNA-seq data from 17 total samples representing these stages were pooled to generate a de novo assembly of the transcriptome using a Trinity pipeline. From 27.9Gb of raw sequences, we identified 21,244 transcripts. To our knowledge, this is the first published assembly of axolotl oropharyngeal endoderm explants. This data and transcriptome assembly relate to the research article “Transcriptome Analysis of Axolotl Oropharyngeal Explants During Taste Bud Differentiation Stages” (Kohli et al. 2020). This RNA-seq data and transcriptome assembly provide information on genes expressed in the oropharyngeal endoderm and will be valuable in the identification of taste bud development genes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920310209Ambystoma mexicanumAxolotldeNovo AssemblyRNAseqTranscriptome
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren Marazzi
Priya Kohli
Deborah Eastman
spellingShingle Lauren Marazzi
Priya Kohli
Deborah Eastman
Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
Data in Brief
Ambystoma mexicanum
Axolotl
deNovo Assembly
RNAseq
Transcriptome
author_facet Lauren Marazzi
Priya Kohli
Deborah Eastman
author_sort Lauren Marazzi
title Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
title_short Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
title_full Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
title_fullStr Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptome dataset for RNA-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
title_sort transcriptome dataset for rna-seq analysis of axolotl embryonic oropharyngeal endoderm explants
publisher Elsevier
series Data in Brief
issn 2352-3409
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Animal nutrition and toxin deterrence rely on the ability to taste, which occurs through columnar taste cells clustered within taste buds. Taste buds in mammals are located within specialized tissues, called papillae. However, taste buds in fish and amphibians, such as axolotls (Ambystoma mexicanum), are not housed in papillae, rather they are embedded within the pharyngeal epithelium. This simplified tissue level organization, along with the ability of cultured oropharyngeal explants from early embryos to produce taste buds on the same time-line as embryos, make the axolotl an excellent model to identify molecules specifically involved in taste bud cell differentiation. We performed de novo transcriptomic analysis on RNA sequences from three different stages of oropharyngeal explants: stages 37/38, 39, and 41. RNA-seq data from 17 total samples representing these stages were pooled to generate a de novo assembly of the transcriptome using a Trinity pipeline. From 27.9Gb of raw sequences, we identified 21,244 transcripts. To our knowledge, this is the first published assembly of axolotl oropharyngeal endoderm explants. This data and transcriptome assembly relate to the research article “Transcriptome Analysis of Axolotl Oropharyngeal Explants During Taste Bud Differentiation Stages” (Kohli et al. 2020). This RNA-seq data and transcriptome assembly provide information on genes expressed in the oropharyngeal endoderm and will be valuable in the identification of taste bud development genes.
topic Ambystoma mexicanum
Axolotl
deNovo Assembly
RNAseq
Transcriptome
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352340920310209
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