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SCIM: universal single-cell matching with unpaired feature sets.
Stark, Stefan G; Ficek, Joanna; Locatello, Francesco; Bonilla, Ximena; Chevrier, Stéphane; Singer, Franziska; Rätsch, Gunnar; Lehmann, Kjong-Van.
Afiliação
  • Stark SG; Department of Computer Science, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland.
  • Ficek J; Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Quartier Sorge Bâtiment Amphipôle, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • Locatello F; Life Science Zurich Graduate School, PhD Program Molecular & Translational Biomedicine, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
  • Bonilla X; Department of Computer Science, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland.
  • Chevrier S; Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, Quartier Sorge Bâtiment Amphipôle, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
  • Singer F; Life Science Zurich Graduate School, PhD Program Molecular & Translational Biomedicine, 8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
  • Rätsch G; Department of Computer Science, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland.
  • Lehmann KV; Center for Learning Systems, ETH Zürich, 8092 Zürich, Switzerland.
Bioinformatics ; 36(Suppl_2): i919-i927, 2020 12 30.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33381818
ABSTRACT
MOTIVATION Recent technological advances have led to an increase in the production and availability of single-cell data. The ability to integrate a set of multi-technology measurements would allow the identification of biologically or clinically meaningful observations through the unification of the perspectives afforded by each technology. In most cases, however, profiling technologies consume the used cells and thus pairwise correspondences between datasets are lost. Due to the sheer size single-cell datasets can acquire, scalable algorithms that are able to universally match single-cell measurements carried out in one cell to its corresponding sibling in another technology are needed.

RESULTS:

We propose Single-Cell data Integration via Matching (SCIM), a scalable approach to recover such correspondences in two or more technologies. SCIM assumes that cells share a common (low-dimensional) underlying structure and that the underlying cell distribution is approximately constant across technologies. It constructs a technology-invariant latent space using an autoencoder framework with an adversarial objective. Multi-modal datasets are integrated by pairing cells across technologies using a bipartite matching scheme that operates on the low-dimensional latent representations. We evaluate SCIM on a simulated cellular branching process and show that the cell-to-cell matches derived by SCIM reflect the same pseudotime on the simulated dataset. Moreover, we apply our method to two real-world scenarios, a melanoma tumor sample and a human bone marrow sample, where we pair cells from a scRNA dataset to their sibling cells in a CyTOF dataset achieving 90% and 78% cell-matching accuracy for each one of the samples, respectively. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION https//github.com/ratschlab/scim. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Software / Análise de Célula Única Limite: Humans Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Software / Análise de Célula Única Limite: Humans Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article