scholarly journals ImmuSort, a database on gene plasticity and electronic sorting for immune cells

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pingzhang Wang ◽  
Yehong Yang ◽  
Wenling Han ◽  
Dalong Ma

Abstract Gene expression is highly dynamic and plastic. We present a new immunological database, ImmuSort. Unlike other gene expression databases, ImmuSort provides a convenient way to view global differential gene expression data across thousands of experimental conditions in immune cells. It enables electronic sorting, which is a bioinformatics process to retrieve cell states associated with specific experimental conditions that are mainly based on gene expression intensity. A comparison of gene expression profiles reveals other applications, such as the evaluation of immune cell biomarkers and cell subsets, identification of cell specific and/or disease-associated genes or transcripts, comparison of gene expression in different transcript variants and probe set quality evaluation. A plasticity score is introduced to measure gene plasticity. Average rank and marker evaluation scores are used to evaluate biomarkers. The current version includes 31 human and 17 mouse immune cell groups, comprising 10,422 and 3,929 microarrays derived from public databases, respectively. A total of 20,283 human and 20,963 mouse genes are available to query in the database. Examples show the distinct advantages of the database. The database URL is http://immusort.bjmu.edu.cn/.

2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (23) ◽  
pp. 6098 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amarinder Singh Thind ◽  
Kumar Parijat Tripathi ◽  
Mario Rosario Guarracino

The comparison of high throughput gene expression datasets obtained from different experimental conditions is a challenging task. It provides an opportunity to explore the cellular response to various biological events such as disease, environmental conditions, and drugs. There is a need for tools that allow the integration and analysis of such data. We developed the “RankerGUI pipeline”, a user-friendly web application for the biological community. It allows users to use various rank based statistical approaches for the comparison of full differential gene expression profiles between the same or different biological states obtained from different sources. The pipeline modules are an integration of various open-source packages, a few of which are modified for extended functionality. The main modules include rank rank hypergeometric overlap, enriched rank rank hypergeometric overlap and distance calculations. Additionally, preprocessing steps such as merging differential expression profiles of multiple independent studies can be added before running the main modules. Output plots show the strength, pattern, and trends among complete differential expression profiles. In this paper, we describe the various modules and functionalities of the developed pipeline. We also present a case study that demonstrates how the pipeline can be used for the comparison of differential expression profiles obtained from multiple platforms’ data of the Gene Expression Omnibus. Using these comparisons, we investigate gene expression patterns in kidney and lung cancers.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (S8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yen-Jung Chiu ◽  
Yi-Hsuan Hsieh ◽  
Yen-Hua Huang

Abstract Background To facilitate the investigation of the pathogenic roles played by various immune cells in complex tissues such as tumors, a few computational methods for deconvoluting bulk gene expression profiles to predict cell composition have been created. However, available methods were usually developed along with a set of reference gene expression profiles consisting of imbalanced replicates across different cell types. Therefore, the objective of this study was to create a new deconvolution method equipped with a new set of reference gene expression profiles that incorporate more microarray replicates of the immune cells that have been frequently implicated in the poor prognosis of cancers, such as T helper cells, regulatory T cells and macrophage M1/M2 cells. Methods Our deconvolution method was developed by choosing ε-support vector regression (ε-SVR) as the core algorithm assigned with a loss function subject to the L1-norm penalty. To construct the reference gene expression signature matrix for regression, a subset of differentially expressed genes were chosen from 148 microarray-based gene expression profiles for 9 types of immune cells by using ANOVA and minimizing condition number. Agreement analyses including mean absolute percentage errors and Bland-Altman plots were carried out to compare the performances of our method and CIBERSORT. Results In silico cell mixtures, simulated bulk tissues, and real human samples with known immune-cell fractions were used as the test datasets for benchmarking. Our method outperformed CIBERSORT in the benchmarks using in silico breast tissue-immune cell mixtures in the proportions of 30:70 and 50:50, and in the benchmark using 164 human PBMC samples. Our results suggest that the performance of our method was at least comparable to that of a state-of-the-art tool, CIBERSORT. Conclusions We developed a new cell composition deconvolution method and the implementation was entirely based on the publicly available R and Python packages. In addition, we compiled a new set of reference gene expression profiles, which might allow for a more robust prediction of the immune cell fractions from the expression profiles of cell mixtures. The source code of our method could be downloaded from https://github.com/holiday01/deconvolution-to-estimate-immune-cell-subsets.


2021 ◽  
Vol 99 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 301-301
Author(s):  
Chaoyang Li ◽  
Qianglin Liu ◽  
Matt Welborn ◽  
Leshan Wang ◽  
Yuxia Li ◽  
...  

Abstract The amount of intramuscular fat directly influences the meat quality. However, significant differences in the ability to accumulate intramuscular fat are present among different beef cattle breeds. While Wagyu, a cattle breed that originated from Japan, is renowned for abundant intramuscular fat, Brahman cattle generally have very little intramuscular fat accumulation and produce tougher meat. We identified that bovine intramuscular fat is derived from a group of bipotent progenitor cells named fibro/adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) which also give rise to fibroblasts. Thus, the variation in intramuscular fat development between Wagyu and Brahman is likely attributed to the difference in FAPs between these two breeds. In order to understand the gene expression difference between FAPs of the two breeds, single-cell RNA-seq was performed using total single-nucleated cells isolated from the longissimus muscle of young purebred Wagyu, purebred Brahman, and Wagyu-Brahman cross cattle. FAPs constitute the largest single-nucleated cell population in both Wagyu and Brahman skeletal muscle. Multiple subpopulations of FAPs with different gene expression profiles were identified, suggesting that FAP is a heterogeneous population. A unique FAP cluster expressing lower levels of fibrillar collagen and extracellular remodeling enzyme genes but higher levels of select proadipogenic genes was identified exclusively in Wagyu skeletal muscle, which likely contributes to the robust intramuscular adipogenic efficiency of Wagyu FAPs. In conclusion, the difference in the cellular composition and gene expression of FAPs between Wagyu and Brahman cattle likely contribute to their distinct meat quality.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. A12.1-A12
Author(s):  
Y Arjmand Abbassi ◽  
N Fang ◽  
W Zhu ◽  
Y Zhou ◽  
Y Chen ◽  
...  

Recent advances of high-throughput single cell sequencing technologies have greatly improved our understanding of the complex biological systems. Heterogeneous samples such as tumor tissues commonly harbor cancer cell-specific genetic variants and gene expression profiles, both of which have been shown to be related to the mechanisms of disease development, progression, and responses to treatment. Furthermore, stromal and immune cells within tumor microenvironment interact with cancer cells to play important roles in tumor responses to systematic therapy such as immunotherapy or cell therapy. However, most current high-throughput single cell sequencing methods detect only gene expression levels or epigenetics events such as chromatin conformation. The information on important genetic variants including mutation or fusion is not captured. To better understand the mechanisms of tumor responses to systematic therapy, it is essential to decipher the connection between genotype and gene expression patterns of both tumor cells and cells in the tumor microenvironment. We developed FocuSCOPE, a high-throughput multi-omics sequencing solution that can detect both genetic variants and transcriptome from same single cells. FocuSCOPE has been used to successfully perform single cell analysis of both gene expression profiles and point mutations, fusion genes, or intracellular viral sequences from thousands of cells simultaneously, delivering comprehensive insights of tumor and immune cells in tumor microenvironment at single cell resolution.Disclosure InformationY. Arjmand Abbassi: None. N. Fang: None. W. Zhu: None. Y. Zhou: None. Y. Chen: None. U. Deutsch: None.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A954-A955
Author(s):  
Jacob Kaufman ◽  
Doug Cress ◽  
Theresa Boyle ◽  
David Carbone ◽  
Neal Ready ◽  
...  

BackgroundLKB1 (STK11) is a commonly disrupted tumor suppressor in NSCLC. Its loss promotes an immune exclusion phenotype with evidence of low expression of interferon stimulated genes (ISG) and decreased microenvironment immune infiltration.1 2 Clinically, LKB1 loss induces primary immunotherapy resistance.3 LKB1 is a master regulator of a complex downstream kinase network and has pleiotropic effects on cell biology. Understanding the heterogeneous phenotypes associated with LKB1 loss and their influence on tumor-immune biology will help define and overcome mechanisms of immunotherapy resistance within this subset of lung cancer.MethodsWe applied multi-omic analyses across multiple lung adenocarcinoma datasets2 4–6 (>1000 tumors) to define transcriptional and genetic features enriched in LKB1-deficient lung cancer. Top scoring phenotypes exhibited heterogeneity across LKB1-loss tumors, and were further interrogated to determine association with increased or decreased markers of immune activity. Further, immune cell-types were estimated by Cibersort to identify effects of LKB1 loss on the immune microenvironment. Key conclusions were confirmed by blinded pathology review.ResultsWe show that LKB1 loss significantly affects differentiation patterns, with enrichment of ASCL1-expressing tumors with putative neuroendocrine differentiation. LKB1-deficient neuroendocrine tumors had lower expression of Interferon Stimulated Genes (ISG), MHC1 and MHC2 components, and immune infiltration compared to LKB1-WT and non-neuroendocrine LKB1-deficient tumors (figure 1).The abundances of 22 immune cell types assessed by Cibersort were compared between LKB1-deficient and LKB1-WT tumors. We observe skewing of immune microenvironmental composition by LKB1 loss, with lower abundance of dendritic cells, monocytes, and macrophages, and increased levels of neutrophils and plasma cells (table 1). These trends were most pronounced among tumors with neuroendocrine differentiation, and were concordant across three independent datasets. In a confirmatory subset of 20 tumors, plasma cell abundance was assessed by a blinded pathologist. Pathologist assessment was 100% concordant with Cibersort prediction, and association with LKB1 loss was confirmed (P=0.001).Abstract 909 Figure 1Immune-associated Gene Expression Profiles Affected by Neuroendocrine Differentiation within LKB1-Deficient Lung Adenocarcinomas. Gene expression profiles corresponding to five immune-associated phenotypes are shown with bars indicating average GEP scores for tumors grouped according to LKB1 and neuroendocrine status as indicated. P-values represent results from Student’s T-test between groups as indicated.Abstract 909 Table 1LKB1 Loss Affects Composition of Immune Microenvironment. Values indicate log10 P-values comparing LKB1-loss to LKB1-WT tumors. Positive (red) indicates increased abundance in LKB1 loss. Negative (blue) indicates decreased abundance.ConclusionsWe conclude that tumor differentiation patterns strongly influence the immune microenvironment and immune exclusion characteristics of LKB1-deficient tumors. Neuroendocrine differentiation is associated with the strongest immune exclusion characteristics and should be evaluated clinically for evidence of immunotherapy resistance. A novel observation of increased plasma cell abundance is observed across multiple datasets and confirmed by pathology. Causal mechanisms linking differentiation status to immune activity is not well understood, and the functional role of plasma cells in the immune biology of LKB1-deficient tumors is undefined. These questions warrant further study to inform precision immuno-oncology treatments for these patients.AcknowledgementsThis work was funded by SITC AZ Immunotherapy in Lung Cancer grant (SPS256666) and DOD Lung Cancer Research Program Concept Award (LC180633).ReferencesSkoulidis F, Byers LA, Diao L, et al. Co-occurring genomic alterations define major subsets of KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinoma with distinct biology, immune profiles, and therapeutic vulnerabilities. Cancer Discov 2015;5:860–77.Schabath MB, Welsh EA, Fulp WJ, et al. Differential association of STK11 and TP53 with KRAS mutation-associated gene expression, proliferation and immune surveillance in lung adenocarcinoma. Oncogene 2016;35:3209–16.Skoulidis F, Goldberg ME, Greenawalt DM, et al. STK11/LKB1 mutations and PD-1 inhibitor resistance in KRAS-mutant lung adenocarcinoma. Cancer Discovery 2018;8:822-835.Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network. Comprehensive molecular profiling of lung adenocarcinoma. Nature 2014;511:543–50.Chitale D, Gong Y, Taylor BS, et al. An integrated genomic analysis of lung cancer reveals loss of DUSP4 in EGFR-mutant tumors. Oncogene 2009;28:2773–83.Shedden K, Taylor JM, Enkemann SA, et al. Gene expression-based survival prediction in lung adenocarcinoma: a multi-site, blinded validation study. Nat Med 2008;14:822–7.


2016 ◽  
Vol 6 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. s-0036-1582635-s-0036-1582635 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sibylle Grad ◽  
Ying Zhang ◽  
Olga Rozhnova ◽  
Elena Schelkunova ◽  
Mikhail Mikhailovsky ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (21) ◽  
pp. 11478
Author(s):  
Qi He ◽  
Maria Jamalpour ◽  
Eric Bergquist ◽  
Robin L. Anderson ◽  
Karin Gustafsson ◽  
...  

Metastasis reflects both the inherent properties of tumor cells and the response of the stroma to the presence of the tumor. Vascular barrier properties, either due to endothelial cell (EC) or pericyte function, play an important role in metastasis in addition to the contribution of the immune system. The Shb gene encodes the Src homology-2 domain protein B that operates downstream of tyrosine kinases in both vascular and immune cells. We have investigated E0771.lmb breast carcinoma metastasis in mice with conditional deletion of the Shb gene using the Cdh5-CreERt2 transgene, resulting in inactivation of the Shb-gene in EC and some hematopoietic cell populations. Lung metastasis from orthotopic tumors, tumor vascular and immune cell characteristics, and immune cell gene expression profiles were determined. We found no increase in vascular leakage that could explain the observed increase in metastasis upon the loss of Shb expression. Instead, Shb deficiency in EC promoted the recruitment of monocytic/macrophagic myeloid-derived suppressor cells (mMDSC), an immune cell type that confers a suppressive immune response, thus enhancing lung metastasis. An MDSC-promoting cytokine/chemokine profile was simultaneously observed in tumors grown in mice with EC-specific Shb deficiency, providing an explanation for the expanded mMDSC population. The results demonstrate an intricate interplay between tumor EC and immune cells that pivots between pro-tumoral and anti-tumoral properties, depending on relevant genetic and/or environmental factors operating in the microenvironment.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document