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Size matters : the impact of nucleus size on results from spatial transcriptomics

Authors :
Mohammadi, Elyas
Chojnowska, Katarzyna
Bienkowski, Michal
Kostecka, Anna
Koczkowska, Magdalena
Zmijewski, Michal A.
Jakalski, Marcin
Ingelsson, Martin
Filipowicz, Natalia
Olszewski, Pawel
Davies, Hanna
Wierzbicka, Justyna M. M.
Hyman, Bradley T. T.
Dumanski, Jan P.
Piotrowski, Arkadiusz
Mieczkowski, Jakub
Mohammadi, Elyas
Chojnowska, Katarzyna
Bienkowski, Michal
Kostecka, Anna
Koczkowska, Magdalena
Zmijewski, Michal A.
Jakalski, Marcin
Ingelsson, Martin
Filipowicz, Natalia
Olszewski, Pawel
Davies, Hanna
Wierzbicka, Justyna M. M.
Hyman, Bradley T. T.
Dumanski, Jan P.
Piotrowski, Arkadiusz
Mieczkowski, Jakub
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Visium Spatial Gene Expression (ST) is a method combining histological spatial information with transcriptomics profiles directly from tissue sections. The use of spatial information has made it possible to discover new modes of gene expression regulations. However, in the ST experiment, the nucleus size of cells may exceed the thickness of a tissue slice. This may, in turn, negatively affect comprehensive capturing the transcriptomics profile in a single slice, especially for tissues having large differences in the size of nuclei. Methods: Here, we defined the effect of Consecutive Slices Data Integration (CSDI) on unveiling accurate spot clustering and deconvolution of spatial transcriptomic spots in human postmortem brains. By considering the histological information as reference, we assessed the improvement of unsupervised clustering and single nuclei RNA-seq and ST data integration before and after CSDI. Results: Apart from the escalated number of defined clusters representing neuronal layers, the pattern of clusters in consecutive sections was concordant only after CSDI. Besides, the assigned cell labels to spots matches the histological pattern of tissue sections after CSDI. Conclusion: CSDI can be applied to investigate consecutive sections studied with ST in the human cerebral cortex, avoiding misinterpretation of spot clustering and annotation, increasing accuracy of cell recognition as well as improvement in uncovering the layers of grey matter in the human brain.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1387018919
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186.s12967-023-04129-z