scholarly journals CCPLS reveals cell-type-specific spatial dependence of transcriptomes in single cells

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takaho Tsuchiya ◽  
Hiroki Hori ◽  
Haruka Ozaki

Motivation: Cell-cell communications regulate internal cellular states of the cell, e.g., gene expression and cell functions, and play pivotal roles in normal development and disease states. Furthermore, single-cell RNA sequencing methods have revealed cell-to-cell expression variability of highly variable genes (HVGs), which is also crucial. Nevertheless, the regulation on cell-to-cell expression variability of HVGs via cell-cell communications is still unexplored. The recent advent of spatial transcriptome measurement methods has linked gene expression profiles to the spatial context of single cells, which has provided opportunities to reveal those regulations. The existing computational methods extract genes with expression levels that are influenced by neighboring cell types based on the spatial transcriptome data. However, limitations remain in the quantitativeness and interpretability: it neither focuses on HVGs, considers cooperation of neighboring cell types, nor quantifies the degree of regulation with each neighboring cell type. Results: Here, we propose CCPLS (Cell-Cell communications analysis by Partial Least Square regression modeling), which is a statistical framework for identifying cell-cell communications as the effects of multiple neighboring cell types on cell-to-cell expression variability of HVGs, based on the spatial transcriptome data. For each cell type, CCPLS performs PLS regression modeling and reports coefficients as the quantitative index of the cell-cell communications. Evaluation using simulated data showed our method accurately estimated effects of multiple neighboring cell types on HVGs. Furthermore, by applying CCPLS to the two real datasets, we demonstrate CCPLS can be used to extract biologically interpretable insights from the inferred cell-cell communications.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bárbara Andrade Barbosa ◽  
Saskia D. van Asten ◽  
Ji Won Oh ◽  
Arantza Farina-Sarasqueta ◽  
Joanne Verheij ◽  
...  

AbstractDeconvolution of bulk gene expression profiles into the cellular components is pivotal to portraying tissue’s complex cellular make-up, such as the tumor microenvironment. However, the inherently variable nature of gene expression requires a comprehensive statistical model and reliable prior knowledge of individual cell types that can be obtained from single-cell RNA sequencing. We introduce BLADE (Bayesian Log-normAl Deconvolution), a unified Bayesian framework to estimate both cellular composition and gene expression profiles for each cell type. Unlike previous comprehensive statistical approaches, BLADE can handle > 20 types of cells due to the efficient variational inference. Throughout an intensive evaluation with > 700 simulated and real datasets, BLADE demonstrated enhanced robustness against gene expression variability and better completeness than conventional methods, in particular, to reconstruct gene expression profiles of each cell type. In summary, BLADE is a powerful tool to unravel heterogeneous cellular activity in complex biological systems from standard bulk gene expression data.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Eve Olivieri ◽  
Roozbeh Dehghannasiri ◽  
Peter Wang ◽  
SoRi Jang ◽  
Antoine de Morree ◽  
...  

More than 95% of human genes are alternatively spliced. Yet, the extent splicing is regulated at single-cell resolution has remained controversial due to both available data and methods to interpret it. We apply the SpliZ, a new statistical approach that is agnostic to transcript annotation, to detect cell-type-specific regulated splicing in > 110K carefully annotated single cells from 12 human tissues. Using 10x data for discovery, 9.1% of genes with computable SpliZ scores are cell-type specifically spliced. These results are validated with RNA FISH, single cell PCR, and in high throughput with Smart-seq2. Regulated splicing is found in ubiquitously expressed genes such as actin light chain subunit MYL6 and ribosomal protein RPS24, which has an epithelial-specific microexon. 13% of the statistically most variable splice sites in cell-type specifically regulated genes are also most variable in mouse lemur or mouse. SpliZ analysis further reveals 170 genes with regulated splicing during sperm development using, 10 of which are conserved in mouse and mouse lemur. The statistical properties of the SpliZ allow model-based identification of subpopulations within otherwise indistinguishable cells based on gene expression, illustrated by subpopulations of classical monocytes with stereotyped splicing, including an un-annotated exon, in SAT1, a Diamine acetyltransferase. Together, this unsupervised and annotation-free analysis of differential splicing in ultra high throughput droplet-based sequencing of human cells across multiple organs establishes splicing is regulated cell-type-specifically independent of gene expression.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bárbara Andrade Barbosa ◽  
Saskia van Asten ◽  
Ji-won Oh ◽  
Arantza Fariña-Sarasqueta ◽  
Joanne Verheij ◽  
...  

Abstract High-resolution deconvolution of bulk gene expression profiles is pivotal to characterize the complex cellular make-up of tissues, such as tumor microenvironment. Single-cell RNA-seq provides reliable prior knowledge for deconvolution, however, a comprehensive statistical model is required for efficient utilization due to the inherently variable nature of gene expression. We introduce BLADE (Bayesian Log-normAl Deconvolution), a comprehensive probabilistic framework to estimate both cellular make-up and gene expression profiles of each cell type in each sample. Unlike previous comprehensive statistical approaches, BLADE can handle >20 cell types thanks to the efficient variational inference. Throughout an intensive evaluation using >700 datasets, BLADE showed enhanced robustness against gene expression variability and better completeness than conventional methods, in particular to reconstruct gene expression profiles of each cell type. All-in-all, BLADE is a powerful tool to unravel heterogeneous cellular activity in complex biological systems based on standard bulk gene expression data.


Science ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 370 (6518) ◽  
pp. eaba7612 ◽  
Author(s):  
Silvia Domcke ◽  
Andrew J. Hill ◽  
Riza M. Daza ◽  
Junyue Cao ◽  
Diana R. O’Day ◽  
...  

The chromatin landscape underlying the specification of human cell types is of fundamental interest. We generated human cell atlases of chromatin accessibility and gene expression in fetal tissues. For chromatin accessibility, we devised a three-level combinatorial indexing assay and applied it to 53 samples representing 15 organs, profiling ~800,000 single cells. We leveraged cell types defined by gene expression to annotate these data and cataloged hundreds of thousands of candidate regulatory elements that exhibit cell type–specific chromatin accessibility. We investigated the properties of lineage-specific transcription factors (such as POU2F1 in neurons), organ-specific specializations of broadly distributed cell types (such as blood and endothelial), and cell type–specific enrichments of complex trait heritability. These data represent a rich resource for the exploration of in vivo human gene regulation in diverse tissues and cell types.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haotian Teng ◽  
Ye Yuan ◽  
Ziv Bar-Joseph

ABSTRACTMotivationRecent advancements in fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) techniques enable them to concurrently obtain information on the location and gene expression of single cells. A key question in the initial analysis of such spatial transcriptomics data is the assignment of cell types. To date, most studies used methods that only rely on the expression levels of the genes in each cell for such assignments. To fully utilize the data and to improve the ability to identify novel sub-types we developed a new method, FICT, which combines both expression and neighborhood information when assigning cell types.ResultsFICT optimizes a probabilistic function that we formalize and for which we provide learning and inference algorithms. We used FICT to analyze both simulated and several real spatial transcriptomics data. As we show, FICT can accurately identify cell types and sub-types improving on expression only methods and other methods proposed for clustering spatial transcriptomics data. Some of the spatial sub-types identified by FICT provide novel hypotheses about the new functions for excitatory and inhibitory neurons.AvailabilityFICT is available at: https://github.com/haotianteng/[email protected]


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Lei ◽  
Mengnan Cheng ◽  
Zihao Li ◽  
Zhenkun Zhuang ◽  
Liang Wu ◽  
...  

Non-human primates (NHP) provide a unique opportunity to study human neurological diseases, yet detailed characterization of the cell types and transcriptional regulatory features in the NHP brain is lacking. We applied a combinatorial indexing assay, sci-ATAC-seq, as well as single-nuclei RNA-seq, to profile chromatin accessibility in 43,793 single cells and transcriptomics in 11,477 cells, respectively, from prefrontal cortex, primary motor cortex and the primary visual cortex of adult cynomolgus monkey Macaca fascularis. Integrative analysis of these two datasets, resolved regulatory elements and transcription factors that specify cell type distinctions, and discovered area-specific diversity in chromatin accessibility and gene expression within excitatory neurons. We also constructed the dynamic landscape of chromatin accessibility and gene expression of oligodendrocyte maturation to characterize adult remyelination. Furthermore, we identified cell type-specific enrichment of differentially spliced gene isoforms and disease-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms. Our datasets permit integrative exploration of complex regulatory dynamics in macaque brain tissue at single-cell resolution.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sinisa Hrvatin ◽  
Christopher P. Tzeng ◽  
M. Aurel Nagy ◽  
Hume Stroud ◽  
Charalampia Koutsioumpa ◽  
...  

AbstractEnhancers are the primary DNA regulatory elements that confer cell type specificity of gene expression. Recent studies characterizing individual enhancers have revealed their potential to direct heterologous gene expression in a highly cell-type-specific manner. However, it has not yet been possible to systematically identify and test the function of enhancers for each of the many cell types in an organism. We have developed PESCA, a scalable and generalizable method that leverages ATAC- and single-cell RNA-sequencing protocols, to characterize cell-type-specific enhancers that should enable genetic access and perturbation of gene function across mammalian cell types. Focusing on the highly heterogeneous mammalian cerebral cortex, we apply PESCA to find enhancers and generate viral reagents capable of accessing and manipulating a subset of somatostatin-expressing cortical interneurons with high specificity. This study demonstrates the utility of this platform for developing new cell-type-specific viral reagents, with significant implications for both basic and translational research.One sentence summaryHighly paralleled functional evaluation of enhancer activity in single cells generates new cell-type-specific tools with broad medical and scientific applications.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kun Wang ◽  
Sushant Patkar ◽  
Joo Sang Lee ◽  
E. Michael Gertz ◽  
Welles Robinson ◽  
...  

AbstractThe tumor microenvironment (TME) is a complex mixture of cell-types that interact with each other to affect tumor growth and clinical outcomes. To accelerate the discovery of such interactions, we developed CODEFACS (COnfident DEconvolution For All Cell Subsets), a deconvolution tool inferring cell-type-specific gene expression in each sample from bulk expression measurements, and LIRICS (LIgand Receptor Interactions between Cell Subsets), a supporting pipeline that analyzes the deconvolved gene expression from CODEFACS to identify clinically relevant ligand-receptor interactions between cell-types. Using 15 benchmark test datasets, we first demonstrate that CODEFACS substantially improves the ability to reconstruct cell-type-specific transcriptomes from individual bulk samples, compared to the state-of-the-art method, CIBERSORTx. Second, analyzing the TCGA, we uncover cell-cell interactions that specifically occur in TME of mismatch-repair-deficient tumors and are associated with their high response rates to anti-PD1 treatment. These results point to specific T-cell co-stimulating interactions that enhance immunotherapy responses in tumors independently of their mutation burden levels. Finally, using machine learning, we identify a subset of cell-cell interactions that predict patient response to anti-PD1 therapy in melanoma better than recently published bulk transcriptomics-based signatures. CODEFACS offers a way to study bulk cancer and normal transcriptomes at a cell type-specific resolution, complementing single-cell transcriptomics.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koos Rooijers ◽  
Corina M. Markodimitraki ◽  
Franka J. Rang ◽  
Sandra S. de Vries ◽  
Alex Chialastri ◽  
...  

AbstractThe epigenome plays a critical role in regulating gene expression in mammalian cells. However, understanding how cell-to-cell heterogeneity in the epigenome influences gene expression variability remains a major challenge. Here we report a novel method for simultaneous single-cell quantification of protein-DNA contacts with DamID and transcriptomics (scDamID&T). This method enables quantifying the impact of protein-DNA contacts on gene expression from the same cell. By profiling lamina-associated domains (LADs) in human cells, we reveal different dependencies between genome-nuclear lamina (NL) association and gene expression in single cells. In addition, we introduce the E. coli methyltransferase, Dam, as an in vivo marker of chromatin accessibility in single cells and show that scDamID&T can be utilized as a general technology to identify cell types in silico while simultaneously determining the underlying gene-regulatory landscape. With this strategy the effect of chromatin states, transcription factor binding, and genome organization on the acquisition of cell-type specific transcriptional programs can be quantified.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Osorio ◽  
Xue Yu ◽  
Yan Zhong ◽  
Guanxun Li ◽  
Peng Yu ◽  
...  

AbstractBecause of recent technological developments, single-cell assays such as single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) have become much more widely available and have achieved unprecedented resolution in revealing cell heterogeneity. The extent of intrinsic cell-to-cell variability in gene expression, orsingle cell expression variability(scEV), has thus been increasingly appreciated. However, it remains unclear whether this variability is functionally important and, if so, what its implications are for multi-cellular organisms. We therefore analyzed multiple scRNA-seq data sets from lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs), lung airway epithelial cells (LAECs), and dermal fibroblasts (DFs). For each of the three cell types, we estimated scEV in homogeneous populations of cells; we identified 465, 466, and 291 highly variable genes (HVGs), respectively. These HVGs were enriched with specific functions precisely relevant to the cell types, from which the scRNA-seq data used to identify HVGs were generated—e.g., HVGs identified in lymphoblastoid cells were enriched in cytokine signaling pathways, LAECs collagen formation, and DFs keratinization. HVGs were deeply embedded in gene regulatory networks specific to corresponding cell types. We also found that scEV is a heritable trait, partially determined by cell donors’ genetic makeups. Furthermore, across genes, especially immune genes, levels of scEV and between-individual variability in gene expression were positively correlated, suggesting a potential link between the two variabilities measured at different organizational levels. Taken together, our results support the “variation is function” hypothesis, which postulates that scEV is required for higher-level system function. Thus, we argue that quantifying and characterizing scEV in relevant cell types may deepen our understating of normal as well as pathological cellular processes.


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