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SEAM is a spatial single nuclear metabolomics method for dissecting tissue microenvironment

Authors :
Zhiyuan, Yuan
Qiming, Zhou
Lesi, Cai
Lin, Pan
Weiliang, Sun
Shiwei, Qumu
Si, Yu
Jiaxin, Feng
Hansen, Zhao
Yongchang, Zheng
Minglei, Shi
Shao, Li
Yang, Chen
Xinrong, Zhang
Michael Q, Zhang
Source :
Nature methods. 18(10)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Spatial metabolomics can reveal intercellular heterogeneity and tissue organization. Here we report on the spatial single nuclear metabolomics (SEAM) method, a flexible platform combining high-spatial-resolution imaging mass spectrometry and a set of computational algorithms that can display multiscale and multicolor tissue tomography together with identification and clustering of single nuclei by their in situ metabolic fingerprints. We first applied SEAM to a range of wild-type mouse tissues, then delineated a consistent pattern of metabolic zonation in mouse liver. We further studied the spatial metabolic profile in the human fibrotic liver. We discovered subpopulations of hepatocytes with special metabolic features associated with their proximity to the fibrotic niche, and validated this finding by spatial transcriptomics with Geo-seq. These demonstrations highlighted SEAM's ability to explore the spatial metabolic profile and tissue histology at the single-cell level, leading to a deeper understanding of tissue metabolic organization.

Details

ISSN :
15487105
Volume :
18
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature methods
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........e0b5296a84773ff8352ebe9ae0120f76