RNA splicing programs define tissue compartments and cell types at single-cell resolution

The extent splicing is regulated at single-cell resolution has remained controversial due to both available data and methods to interpret it. We apply the SpliZ, a new statistical approach, to detect cell-type-specific splicing in >110K cells from 12 human tissues. Using 10X Chromium data for dis...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2021-09, Vol.10
Hauptverfasser: Olivieri, Julia Eve, Dehghannasiri, Roozbeh, Wang, Peter L, Jang, SoRi, de Morree, Antoine, Tan, Serena Y, Ming, Jingsi, Ruohao Wu, Angela, Quake, Stephen R, Krasnow, Mark A, Salzman, Julia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The extent splicing is regulated at single-cell resolution has remained controversial due to both available data and methods to interpret it. We apply the SpliZ, a new statistical approach, to detect cell-type-specific splicing in >110K cells from 12 human tissues. Using 10X Chromium data for discovery, 9.1% of genes with computable SpliZ scores are cell-type-specifically spliced, including ubiquitously expressed genes and . These results are validated with RNA FISH, single-cell PCR, and Smart-seq2. SpliZ analysis reveals 170 genes with regulated splicing during human spermatogenesis, including examples conserved in mouse and mouse lemur. The SpliZ allows model-based identification of subpopulations indistinguishable based on gene expression, illustrated by subpopulation-specific splicing of classical monocytes involving an ultraconserved exon in . Together, this analysis of differential splicing across multiple organs establishes that splicing is regulated cell-type-specifically.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.70692