Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 421
Filtrar
1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Apr 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38712088

RESUMO

Tissue structure and molecular circuitry in the colon can be profoundly impacted by systemic age-related effects, but many of the underlying molecular cues remain unclear. Here, we built a cellular and spatial atlas of the colon across three anatomical regions and 11 age groups, encompassing ~1,500 mouse gut tissues profiled by spatial transcriptomics and ~400,000 single nucleus RNA-seq profiles. We developed a new computational framework, cSplotch, which learns a hierarchical Bayesian model of spatially resolved cellular expression associated with age, tissue region, and sex, by leveraging histological features to share information across tissue samples and data modalities. Using this model, we identified cellular and molecular gradients along the adult colonic tract and across the main crypt axis, and multicellular programs associated with aging in the large intestine. Our multi-modal framework for the investigation of cell and tissue organization can aid in the understanding of cellular roles in tissue-level pathology.

3.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3104, 2024 Apr 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38600066

RESUMO

During embryonic development, pluripotent cells assume specialized identities by adopting particular gene expression profiles. However, systematically dissecting the relative contributions of mRNA transcription and degradation to shaping those profiles remains challenging, especially within embryos with diverse cellular identities. Here, we combine single-cell RNA-Seq and metabolic labeling to capture temporal cellular transcriptomes of zebrafish embryos where newly-transcribed (zygotic) and pre-existing (maternal) mRNA can be distinguished. We introduce kinetic models to quantify mRNA transcription and degradation rates within individual cell types during their specification. These models reveal highly varied regulatory rates across thousands of genes, coordinated transcription and destruction rates for many transcripts, and link differences in degradation to specific sequence elements. They also identify cell-type-specific differences in degradation, namely selective retention of maternal transcripts within primordial germ cells and enveloping layer cells, two of the earliest specified cell types. Our study provides a quantitative approach to study mRNA regulation during a dynamic spatio-temporal response.


Assuntos
Análise da Expressão Gênica de Célula Única , Peixe-Zebra , Animais , Desenvolvimento Embrionário/genética , Transcrição Gênica , RNA Mensageiro/genética , RNA Mensageiro/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento
4.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3344, 2024 Apr 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38637492

RESUMO

Coordinated cell interactions within the esophagus maintain homeostasis, and disruption can lead to eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE), a chronic inflammatory disease with poorly understood pathogenesis. We profile 421,312 individual cells from the esophageal mucosa of 7 healthy and 15 EoE participants, revealing 60 cell subsets and functional alterations in cell states, compositions, and interactions that highlight previously unclear features of EoE. Active disease displays enrichment of ALOX15+ macrophages, PRDM16+ dendritic cells expressing the EoE risk gene ATP10A, and cycling mast cells, with concomitant reduction of TH17 cells. Ligand-receptor expression uncovers eosinophil recruitment programs, increased fibroblast interactions in disease, and IL-9+IL-4+IL-13+ TH2 and endothelial cells as potential mast cell interactors. Resolution of inflammation-associated signatures includes mast and CD4+ TRM cell contraction and cell type-specific downregulation of eosinophil chemoattractant, growth, and survival factors. These cellular alterations in EoE and remission advance our understanding of eosinophilic inflammation and opportunities for therapeutic intervention.


Assuntos
Esofagite Eosinofílica , Humanos , Esofagite Eosinofílica/genética , Esofagite Eosinofílica/patologia , Células Endoteliais/metabolismo , Interleucina-13 , Inflamação/genética
5.
Nat Genet ; 56(4): 605-614, 2024 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38514782

RESUMO

The relationship between genetic variation and gene expression in brain cell types and subtypes remains understudied. Here, we generated single-nucleus RNA sequencing data from the neocortex of 424 individuals of advanced age; we assessed the effect of genetic variants on RNA expression in cis (cis-expression quantitative trait loci) for seven cell types and 64 cell subtypes using 1.5 million transcriptomes. This effort identified 10,004 eGenes at the cell type level and 8,099 eGenes at the cell subtype level. Many eGenes are only detected within cell subtypes. A new variant influences APOE expression only in microglia and is associated with greater cerebral amyloid angiopathy but not Alzheimer's disease pathology, after adjusting for APOEε4, providing mechanistic insights into both pathologies. Furthermore, only a TMEM106B variant affects the proportion of cell subtypes. Integration of these results with genome-wide association studies highlighted the targeted cell type and probable causal gene within Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, educational attainment and Parkinson's disease loci.


Assuntos
Doença de Alzheimer , Humanos , Doença de Alzheimer/metabolismo , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla/métodos , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Locos de Características Quantitativas/genética , Variação Genética/genética , Proteínas de Membrana/genética , Proteínas do Tecido Nervoso/genética
6.
ArXiv ; 2024 Jan 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38351930

RESUMO

Deep Generative Models (DGMs) are versatile tools for learning data representations while adequately incorporating domain knowledge such as the specification of conditional probability distributions. Recently proposed DGMs tackle the important task of comparing data sets from different sources. One such example is the setting of contrastive analysis that focuses on describing patterns that are enriched in a target data set compared to a background data set. The practical deployment of those models often assumes that DGMs naturally infer interpretable and modular latent representations, which is known to be an issue in practice. Consequently, existing methods often rely on ad-hoc regularization schemes, although without any theoretical grounding. Here, we propose a theory of identifiability for comparative DGMs by extending recent advances in the field of non-linear independent component analysis. We show that, while these models lack identifiability across a general class of mixing functions, they surprisingly become identifiable when the mixing function is piece-wise affine (e.g., parameterized by a ReLU neural network). We also investigate the impact of model misspecification, and empirically show that previously proposed regularization techniques for fitting comparative DGMs help with identifiability when the number of latent variables is not known in advance. Finally, we introduce a novel methodology for fitting comparative DGMs that improves the treatment of multiple data sources via multi-objective optimization and that helps adjust the hyperparameter for the regularization in an interpretable manner, using constrained optimization. We empirically validate our theory and new methodology using simulated data as well as a recent data set of genetic perturbations in cells profiled via single-cell RNA sequencing.

7.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38405704

RESUMO

Neural networks have emerged as immensely powerful tools in predicting functional genomic regions, notably evidenced by recent successes in deciphering gene regulatory logic. However, a systematic evaluation of how model architectures and training strategies impact genomics model performance is lacking. To address this gap, we held a DREAM Challenge where competitors trained models on a dataset of millions of random promoter DNA sequences and corresponding expression levels, experimentally determined in yeast, to best capture the relationship between regulatory DNA and gene expression. For a robust evaluation of the models, we designed a comprehensive suite of benchmarks encompassing various sequence types. While some benchmarks produced similar results across the top-performing models, others differed substantially. All top-performing models used neural networks, but diverged in architectures and novel training strategies, tailored to genomics sequence data. To dissect how architectural and training choices impact performance, we developed the Prix Fixe framework to divide any given model into logically equivalent building blocks. We tested all possible combinations for the top three models and observed performance improvements for each. The DREAM Challenge models not only achieved state-of-the-art results on our comprehensive yeast dataset but also consistently surpassed existing benchmarks on Drosophila and human genomic datasets. Overall, we demonstrate that high-quality gold-standard genomics datasets can drive significant progress in model development.

8.
Nat Biotechnol ; 2024 Jan 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38200118

RESUMO

Single-cell RNA sequencing and other profiling assays have helped interrogate cells at unprecedented resolution and scale, but are inherently destructive. Raman microscopy reports on the vibrational energy levels of proteins and metabolites in a label-free and nondestructive manner at subcellular spatial resolution, but it lacks genetic and molecular interpretability. Here we present Raman2RNA (R2R), a method to infer single-cell expression profiles in live cells through label-free hyperspectral Raman microscopy images and domain translation. We predict single-cell RNA sequencing profiles nondestructively from Raman images using either anchor-based integration with single molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization, or anchor-free generation with adversarial autoencoders. R2R outperformed inference from brightfield images (cosine similarities: R2R >0.85 and brightfield <0.15). In reprogramming of mouse fibroblasts into induced pluripotent stem cells, R2R inferred the expression profiles of various cell states. With live-cell tracking of mouse embryonic stem cell differentiation, R2R traced the early emergence of lineage divergence and differentiation trajectories, overcoming discontinuities in expression space. R2R lays a foundation for future exploration of live genomic dynamics.

9.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37425718

RESUMO

TP53 is the most frequently mutated gene across many cancers and is associated with shorter survival in lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD). To define how TP53 mutations affect the LUAD tumor microenvironment (TME), we constructed a multi-omic cellular and spatial tumor atlas of 23 treatment-naïve human lung tumors. We found that TP53 -mutant ( TP53 mut ) malignant cells lose alveolar identity and upregulate highly proliferative and entropic gene expression programs consistently across resectable LUAD patient tumors, genetically engineered mouse models, and cell lines harboring a wide spectrum of TP53 mutations. We further identified a multicellular tumor niche composed of SPP1 + macrophages and collagen-expressing fibroblasts that coincides with hypoxic, pro-metastatic expression programs in TP53 mut tumors. Spatially correlated angiostatic and immune checkpoint interactions, including CD274 - PDCD1 and PVR - TIGIT , are also enriched in TP53 mut LUAD tumors, which may influence response to checkpoint blockade therapy. Our methodology can be further applied to investigate mutation-specific TME changes in other cancers.

10.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Nov 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38076853

RESUMO

The human airway contains specialized rare epithelial cells whose roles in respiratory disease are not well understood. Ionocytes express the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR), while chemosensory tuft cells express asthma-associated alarmins. However, surprisingly, exceedingly few mature tuft cells have been identified in human lung cell atlases despite the ready identification of rare ionocytes and neuroendocrine cells. To identify human rare cell progenitors and define their lineage relationship to mature tuft cells, we generated a deep lung cell atlas containing 311,748 single cell RNA-Seq (scRNA-seq) profiles from discrete anatomic sites along the large and small airways and lung lobes of explanted donor lungs that could not be used for organ transplantation. Of 154,222 airway epithelial cells, we identified 687 ionocytes (0.45%) that are present in similar proportions in both large and small airways, suggesting that they may contribute to both large and small airways pathologies in CF. In stark contrast, we recovered only 3 mature tuft cells (0.002%). Instead, we identified rare bipotent progenitor cells that can give rise to both ionocytes and tuft cells, which we termed tuft-ionocyte progenitor cells (TIP cells). Remarkably, the cycling fraction of these TIP cells was comparable to that of basal stem cells. We used scRNA-seq and scATAC-seq to predict transcription factors that mark this novel rare cell progenitor population and define intermediate states during TIP cell lineage transitions en route to the differentiation of mature ionocytes and tuft cells. The default lineage of TIP cell descendants is skewed towards ionocytes, explaining the paucity of mature tuft cells in the human airway. However, Type 2 and Type 17 cytokines, associated with asthma and CF, diverted the lineage of TIP cell descendants in vitro , resulting in the differentiation of mature tuft cells at the expense of ionocytes. Consistent with this model of mature tuft cell differentiation, we identify mature tuft cells in a patient who died from an asthma flare. Overall, our findings suggest that the immune signaling pathways active in asthma and CF may skew the composition of disease-relevant rare cells and illustrate how deep atlases are required for identifying physiologically-relevant scarce cell populations.

11.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 8048, 2023 Dec 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38052854

RESUMO

CAR-T therapy is a promising, novel treatment modality for B-cell malignancies and yet many patients relapse through a variety of means, including loss of CAR-T cells and antigen escape. To investigate leukemia-intrinsic CAR-T resistance mechanisms, we performed genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 loss-of-function screens in an immunocompetent murine model of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) utilizing a modular guide RNA library. We identified IFNγR/JAK/STAT signaling and components of antigen processing and presentation pathway as key mediators of resistance to CAR-T therapy in vivo; intriguingly, loss of this pathway yielded the opposite effect in vitro (sensitized leukemia to CAR-T cells). Transcriptional characterization of this model demonstrated upregulation of these pathways in tumors relapsed after CAR-T treatment, and functional studies showed a surprising role for natural killer (NK) cells in engaging this resistance program. Finally, examination of data from B-ALL patients treated with CAR-T revealed an association between poor outcomes and increased expression of JAK/STAT and MHC-I in leukemia cells. Overall, our data identify an unexpected mechanism of resistance to CAR-T therapy in which tumor cell interaction with the in vivo tumor microenvironment, including NK cells, induces expression of an adaptive, therapy-induced, T-cell resistance program in tumor cells.


Assuntos
Linfoma de Burkitt , Leucemia , Leucemia-Linfoma Linfoblástico de Células Precursoras B , Receptores de Antígenos Quiméricos , Humanos , Animais , Camundongos , RNA Guia de Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Imunoterapia Adotiva , Linfócitos T , Leucemia-Linfoma Linfoblástico de Células Precursoras B/genética , Leucemia-Linfoma Linfoblástico de Células Precursoras B/terapia , Microambiente Tumoral
12.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Oct 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37961084

RESUMO

In healthy skin, a cutaneous immune system maintains the balance between tolerance towards innocuous environmental antigens and immune responses against pathological agents. In atopic dermatitis (AD), barrier and immune dysfunction result in chronic tissue inflammation. Our understanding of the skin tissue ecosystem in AD remains incomplete with regard to the hallmarks of pathological barrier formation, and cellular state and clonal composition of disease-promoting cells. Here, we generated a multi-modal cell census of 310,691 cells spanning 86 cell subsets from whole skin tissue of 19 adult individuals, including non-lesional and lesional skin from 11 AD patients, and integrated it with 396,321 cells from four studies into a comprehensive human skin cell atlas in health and disease. Reconstruction of human keratinocyte differentiation from basal to cornified layers revealed a disrupted cornification trajectory in AD. This disrupted epithelial differentiation was associated with signals from a unique immune and stromal multicellular community comprised of MMP12 + dendritic cells (DCs), mature migratory DCs, cycling ILCs, NK cells, inflammatory CCL19 + IL4I1 + fibroblasts, and clonally expanded IL13 + IL22 + IL26 + T cells with overlapping type 2 and type 17 characteristics. Cell subsets within this immune and stromal multicellular community were connected by multiple inter-cellular positive feedback loops predicted to impact community assembly and maintenance. AD GWAS gene expression was enriched both in disrupted cornified keratinocytes and in cell subsets from the lesional immune and stromal multicellular community including IL13 + IL22 + IL26 + T cells and ILCs, suggesting that epithelial or immune dysfunction in the context of the observed cellular communication network can initiate and then converge towards AD. Our work highlights specific, disease-associated cell subsets and interactions as potential targets in progression and resolution of chronic inflammation.

13.
Nat Biotechnol ; 2023 Nov 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37985876

RESUMO

Mucosal and barrier tissues, such as the gut, lung or skin, are composed of a complex network of cells and microbes forming a tight niche that prevents pathogen colonization and supports host-microbiome symbiosis. Characterizing these networks at high molecular and cellular resolution is crucial for understanding homeostasis and disease. Here we present spatial host-microbiome sequencing (SHM-seq), an all-sequencing-based approach that captures tissue histology, polyadenylated RNAs and bacterial 16S sequences directly from a tissue by modifying spatially barcoded glass surfaces to enable simultaneous capture of host transcripts and hypervariable regions of the 16S bacterial ribosomal RNA. We applied our approach to the mouse gut as a model system, used a deep learning approach for data mapping and detected spatial niches defined by cellular composition and microbial geography. We show that subpopulations of gut cells express specific gene programs in different microenvironments characteristic of regional commensal bacteria and impact host-bacteria interactions. SHM-seq should enhance the study of native host-microbe interactions in health and disease.

14.
Nat Biotechnol ; 2023 Oct 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37872410

RESUMO

Pooled CRISPR screens with single-cell RNA sequencing readout (Perturb-seq) have emerged as a key technique in functional genomics, but they are limited in scale by cost and combinatorial complexity. In this study, we modified the design of Perturb-seq by incorporating algorithms applied to random, low-dimensional observations. Compressed Perturb-seq measures multiple random perturbations per cell or multiple cells per droplet and computationally decompresses these measurements by leveraging the sparse structure of regulatory circuits. Applied to 598 genes in the immune response to bacterial lipopolysaccharide, compressed Perturb-seq achieves the same accuracy as conventional Perturb-seq with an order of magnitude cost reduction and greater power to learn genetic interactions. We identified known and novel regulators of immune responses and uncovered evolutionarily constrained genes with downstream targets enriched for immune disease heritability, including many missed by existing genome-wide association studies. Our framework enables new scales of interrogation for a foundational method in functional genomics.

15.
Nat Immunol ; 24(11): 1908-1920, 2023 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37828379

RESUMO

Co-inhibitory and checkpoint molecules suppress T cell function in the tumor microenvironment, thereby rendering T cells dysfunctional. Although immune checkpoint blockade is a successful treatment option for multiple human cancers, severe autoimmune-like adverse effects can limit its application. Here, we show that the gene encoding peptidoglycan recognition protein 1 (PGLYRP1) is highly coexpressed with genes encoding co-inhibitory molecules, indicating that it might be a promising target for cancer immunotherapy. Genetic deletion of Pglyrp1 in mice led to decreased tumor growth and an increased activation/effector phenotype in CD8+ T cells, suggesting an inhibitory function of PGLYRP1 in CD8+ T cells. Surprisingly, genetic deletion of Pglyrp1 protected against the development of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, a model of autoimmune disease in the central nervous system. PGLYRP1-deficient myeloid cells had a defect in antigen presentation and T cell activation, indicating that PGLYRP1 might function as a proinflammatory molecule in myeloid cells during autoimmunity. These results highlight PGLYRP1 as a promising target for immunotherapy that, when targeted, elicits a potent antitumor immune response while protecting against some forms of tissue inflammation and autoimmunity.


Assuntos
Encefalomielite Autoimune Experimental , Neoplasias , Animais , Humanos , Camundongos , Linfócitos T CD8-Positivos/metabolismo , Citocinas/metabolismo , Encefalomielite Autoimune Experimental/genética , Imunoterapia , Inflamação , Doenças Neuroinflamatórias , Microambiente Tumoral
16.
iScience ; 26(9): 107597, 2023 Sep 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37664617

RESUMO

High interleukin (IL)-6 levels are associated with greater COVID-19 severity. IL-6 receptor blockade by tocilizumab (anti-IL6R; Actemra) is used globally for the treatment of severe COVID-19, yet a molecular understanding of the therapeutic benefit remains unclear. We characterized the immune profile and identified cellular and molecular pathways modified by tocilizumab in peripheral blood samples from patients enrolled in the COVACTA study, a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the efficacy and safety of tocilizumab in hospitalized patients with severe COVID-19. We identified markers of inflammation, lymphopenia, myeloid dysregulation, and organ injury that predict disease severity and clinical outcomes. Proteomic analysis confirmed a pharmacodynamic effect for tocilizumab and identified novel pharmacodynamic biomarkers. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that tocilizumab treatment leads to faster resolution of lymphopenia and myeloid dysregulation associated with severe COVID-19, indicating greater anti-inflammatory activity relative to placebo and potentially leading to faster recovery in patients hospitalized with COVID-19.

17.
Nat Biotechnol ; 2023 Aug 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37537502

RESUMO

Single-cell assay for transposase-accessible chromatin by sequencing (scATAC-seq) has emerged as a powerful tool for dissecting regulatory landscapes and cellular heterogeneity. However, an exploration of systemic biases among scATAC-seq technologies has remained absent. In this study, we benchmark the performance of eight scATAC-seq methods across 47 experiments using human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as a reference sample and develop PUMATAC, a universal preprocessing pipeline, to handle the various sequencing data formats. Our analyses reveal significant differences in sequencing library complexity and tagmentation specificity, which impact cell-type annotation, genotype demultiplexing, peak calling, differential region accessibility and transcription factor motif enrichment. Our findings underscore the importance of sample extraction, method selection, data processing and total cost of experiments, offering valuable guidance for future research. Finally, our data and analysis pipeline encompasses 169,000 PBMC scATAC-seq profiles and a best practices code repository for scATAC-seq data analysis, which are freely available to extend this benchmarking effort to future protocols.

20.
Nat Genet ; 55(8): 1267-1276, 2023 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37443254

RESUMO

Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) are a valuable tool for understanding the biology of complex human traits and diseases, but associated variants rarely point directly to causal genes. In the present study, we introduce a new method, polygenic priority score (PoPS), that learns trait-relevant gene features, such as cell-type-specific expression, to prioritize genes at GWAS loci. Using a large evaluation set of genes with fine-mapped coding variants, we show that PoPS and the closest gene individually outperform other gene prioritization methods, but observe the best overall performance by combining PoPS with orthogonal methods. Using this combined approach, we prioritize 10,642 unique gene-trait pairs across 113 complex traits and diseases with high precision, finding not only well-established gene-trait relationships but nominating new genes at unresolved loci, such as LGR4 for estimated glomerular filtration rate and CCR7 for deep vein thrombosis. Overall, we demonstrate that PoPS provides a powerful addition to the gene prioritization toolbox.


Assuntos
Herança Multifatorial , Locos de Características Quantitativas , Humanos , Herança Multifatorial/genética , Locos de Características Quantitativas/genética , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla/métodos , Predisposição Genética para Doença/genética , Fenótipo , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único/genética
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...