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An integrated cell atlas of the human lung in health and disease

Authors :
Malte Luecken
Lisa Sikkema
Daniel Strobl
Luke Zappia
Elo Madissoon
Nikolay Markov
Laure-Emmanuelle Zaragosi
Meshal Ansari
Marie-Jeanne Arguel
Leonie Apperloo
Christophe Becavin
Marijn Berg
Evgeny Chichelnitskiy
Mei-i Chung
Antoine Collin
Aurore Gay
Baharak Hooshiar Kashani
Manu Jain
Theodore Kapellos
Tessa Kole
Christoph Mayr
Michael von Papen
Lance Peter
Ciro Ramírez-Suástegui
Janine Schniering
Chase Taylor
Thomas Walzthoeni
Chuan Xu
Linh Bui
Carlo de Donno
Leander Dony
Minzhe Guo
Austin Gutierrez
Lukas Heumos
Ni Huang
Ignacio Ibarra Del Río
Nathan Jackson
Preetish Kadur Lakshminarasimha Murthy
Mohammad Lotfollahi
Tracy Tabib
Carlos Talavera-Lopez
Kyle Travaglini
Anna Wilbrey-Clark
Kaylee Worlock
Masahiro Yoshida
Tushar Desai
Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen
Christine Falk
Naftali Kaminski
Mark Krasnow
Robert Lafyatis
Marko Nikolic
Joseph Powell
Jay Rajagopal
Max Seibold
Dean Sheppard
Douglas Shepherd
Sarah Teichmann
Alexander Tsankov
Jeffrey Whitsett
Yan Xu
Nicholas Banovich
Pascal Barbry
Thu Duong
Kerstin Meyer
Jonathan Kropski
Dana Pe'er
Herbert Schiller
Purushothama Rao Tata
Joachim Schultze
Maarten van den Berge
Yuexin Chen
James Hagood
Ahmed Hassan
Peter Horvath
Joakim Lundeberg
Sylvie Leroy
Charles Marquette
Gloria Pryhuber
Christos Samakovlis
Xin Sun
Lorraine Ware
Kun Zhang
Alexander Misharin
Martijn Nawijn
Fabian Theis
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Organ- and body-scale cell atlases have the potential to transform our understanding of human biology. To capture the variability present in the population, these atlases must include diverse demographics such as age and ethnicity from both healthy and diseased individuals. The growth in both size and number of single-cell datasets, combined with recent advances in computational techniques, for the first time makes it possible to generate such comprehensive large-scale atlases through integration of multiple datasets. Here, we present the integrated Human Lung Cell Atlas (HLCA) combining 46 datasets of the human respiratory system into a single atlas spanning over 2.2 million cells from 444 individuals across health and disease. The HLCA contains a consensus re-annotation of published and newly generated datasets, resolving under- or misannotation of 59% of cells in the original datasets. The HLCA enables recovery of rare cell types, provides consensus marker genes for each cell type, and uncovers gene modules associated with demographic covariates and anatomical location within the respiratory system. To facilitate the use of the HLCA as a reference for single-cell lung research and allow rapid analysis of new data, we provide an interactive web portal to project datasets onto the HLCA. Finally, we demonstrate the value of the HLCA reference for interpreting disease-associated changes. Thus, the HLCA outlines a roadmap for the development and use of organ-scale cell atlases within the Human Cell Atlas.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6c225b8ec842494e3c796c31c793715c