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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38886186

RESUMO

Large-scale transcriptomic data are crucial for understanding the molecular features of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Integrated 15 transcriptomic datasets of HCC clinical samples, the first version of HCC database (HCCDB v1.0) was released in 2018. Through the meta-analysis of differentially expressed genes and prognosis-related genes across multiple datasets, it provides a systematic view of the altered biological processes and the inter-patient heterogeneities of HCC with high reproducibility and robustness. With four years having passed, the database now needs integration of recently published datasets. Furthermore, the latest single-cell and spatial transcriptomics have provided a great opportunity to decipher complex gene expression variations at the cellular level with spatial architecture. Here, we present HCCDB v2.0, an updated version that combines bulk, single-cell, and spatial transcriptomic data of HCC clinical samples. It dramatically expands the bulk sample size by adding 1656 new samples from 11 datasets to the existing 3917 samples, thereby enhancing the reliability of transcriptomic meta-analysis. A total of 182,832 cells and 69,352 spatial spots are added to the single-cell and spatial transcriptomics sections, respectively. A novel single-cell level and 2-dimension (sc-2D) metric is proposed as well to summarize cell type-specific and dysregulated gene expression patterns. Results are all graphically visualized in our online portal, allowing users to easily retrieve data through a user-friendly interface and navigate between different views. With extensive clinical phenotypes and transcriptomic data in the database, we show two applications for identifying prognosis-associated cells and tumor microenvironment. HCCDB v2.0 is available at http://lifeome.net/database/hccdb2.


Assuntos
Carcinoma Hepatocelular , Neoplasias Hepáticas , Transcriptoma , Humanos , Carcinoma Hepatocelular/genética , Carcinoma Hepatocelular/patologia , Bases de Dados Genéticas , Regulação Neoplásica da Expressão Gênica/genética , Neoplasias Hepáticas/genética , Neoplasias Hepáticas/patologia , RNA-Seq/métodos , Análise da Expressão Gênica de Célula Única , Transcriptoma/genética
2.
Nat Med ; 2024 Aug 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39095595

RESUMO

While single-cell technologies have greatly advanced our comprehension of human brain cell types and functions, studies including large numbers of donors and multiple brain regions are needed to extend our understanding of brain cell heterogeneity. Integrating atlas-level single-cell data presents a chance to reveal rare cell types and cellular heterogeneity across brain regions. Here we present the Brain Cell Atlas, a comprehensive reference atlas of brain cells, by assembling single-cell data from 70 human and 103 mouse studies of the brain throughout major developmental stages across brain regions, covering over 26.3 million cells or nuclei from both healthy and diseased tissues. Using machine-learning based algorithms, the Brain Cell Atlas provides a consensus cell type annotation, and it showcases the identification of putative neural progenitor cells and a cell subpopulation of PCDH9high microglia in the human brain. We demonstrate the gene regulatory difference of PCDH9high microglia between hippocampus and prefrontal cortex and elucidate the cell-cell communication network. The Brain Cell Atlas presents an atlas-level integrative resource for comparing brain cells in different environments and conditions within the Human Cell Atlas.

3.
Natl Sci Rev ; 9(3): nwab179, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35350228

RESUMO

This perspective discusses the need and directions for the development of a unified information framework to enable the assembly of cell atlases and a revolution in medical research on the virtual body of assembled cell systems.

4.
iScience ; 25(5): 104318, 2022 May 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35602947

RESUMO

The accumulation of massive single-cell omics data provides growing resources for building biomolecular atlases of all cells of human organs or the whole body. The true assembly of a cell atlas should be cell-centric rather than file-centric. We developed a unified informatics framework for seamless cell-centric data assembly and built the human Ensemble Cell Atlas (hECA) from scattered data. hECA v1.0 assembled 1,093,299 labeled human cells from 116 published datasets, covering 38 organs and 11 systems. We invented three new methods of atlas applications based on the cell-centric assembly: "in data" cell sorting for targeted data retrieval with customizable logic expressions, "quantitative portraiture" for multi-view representations of biological entities, and customizable reference creation for generating references for automatic annotations. Case studies on agile construction of user-defined sub-atlases and "in data" investigation of CAR-T off-targets in multiple organs showed the great potential enabled by the cell-centric ensemble atlas.

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