A new approach reveals syncytia within the visceral musculature ofDrosophila melanogaster

Development ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 128 (13) ◽  
pp. 2517-2524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Klapper ◽  
Sandra Heuser ◽  
Thomas Strasser ◽  
Wilfried Janning

In order to reveal syncytia within the visceral musculature of Drosophila melanogaster, we have combined the GAL4/UAS system with the single-cell transplantation technique. After transplantation of single cells from UAS-GFP donor embryos into ubiquitously GAL4-expressing recipients, the expression of the reporter gene was exclusively activated in syncytia containing both donor- and recipient-derived nuclei. In the first trial, we tested the system in the larval somatic musculature, which is already known to consist of syncytia. By this means we could show that most of the larval somatic muscles are generated by clonally non-related cells. Moreover, using this approach we were able to detect syncytia within the visceral musculature – a tissue that has previously been described as consisting of mononuclear cells. Both the longitudinal visceral musculature of the midgut and the circular musculature of the hindgut consist of syncytia and persist through metamorphosis. This novel application of the transplantation technique might be a powerful tool to trace syncytia in any organism using the GAL4/UAS system.

Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 2520-2520
Author(s):  
Parashar Dhapola ◽  
Mikael Sommarin ◽  
Mohamed Eldeeb ◽  
Amol Ugale ◽  
David Bryder ◽  
...  

Single-cell transcriptomics (scRNA-Seq) has accelerated the investigation of hematopoietic differentiation. Based on scRNA-Seq data, more refined models of lineage determination in stem- and progenitor cells are now available. Despite such advances, characterizing leukemic cells using single-cell approaches remains challenging. The conventional strategies of scRNA-Seq analysis map all cells on the same low dimensional space using approaches like tSNE and UMAP. However, when used for comparing normal and leukemic cells, such methods are often inadequate as the transcriptome of the leukemic cells has systematically diverged, resulting in irrelevant separation of leukemic subpopulations from their healthy counterpart. Here, we have developed a new computational approach bundled into a tool called Nabo (nabo.readthedocs.io) that has the capacity to directly compare cells that are otherwise unalignable. First, Nabo creates a shared nearest neighbor graph of the reference population, and the heterogeneity of this population is subsequently defined by performing clustering on the graph and calculating a low dimensional representation using t-SNE or UMAP. Nabo then calculates the similarity of incoming cells from a target population to each cell in the reference graph using a modified Canberra metric. The reference cells with higher similarity to the target cells obtain higher mapping scores. The built-in classifier is used to assign each target cell a reference cluster identity. We tested Nabo's accuracy on control datasets and found that Nabo's performance in terms of accuracy and robustness of projection is comparable to state-of-art methods. Moreover, Nabo is a generalized domain adaptation algorithm and hence can perform classification of target cells that are arbitrarily dissimilar to reference cells. Nabo could identify the cell-identity of sorted CD19+ B cells, CD14+ monocytes and CD56+ by projecting these unlabeled cells onto labelled peripheral blood mononuclear cells with an average specificity higher than 0.98. The general applicability of Nabo was demonstrated by successfully integrating pancreatic cells, sequenced in three different studies using different sequencing chemistries with comparable or better accuracy than existing methods. Also, it was conclusively demonstrated that Nabo can predict the identity of human HSPC subpopulations to the same accuracy as can be achieved by established cell-surface markers. Having Nabo at hand, we aimed to uncover the heterogeneity of hematopoietic cells from different stages of AML. Nabo showed that AML cells lacked the heterogeneity of normal CD34+ cells and were devoid of cells with HSC gene signature. A large patient-to-patient variability was found where leukemic cells mapped to distinct stages of myeloid progenitors. To ask whether this variability could reflect differences in leukemia-initiating cell identity, we induced leukemia in murine granulocyte-monocyte-lymphoid progenitors (GMLPs) using an inducible model for MLL-ENL-driven AML. On projection, more than 70% of MLL-ENL-activated cells mapped to a distinct Flt3+ subpopulation present within healthy GMLPs. Statistical validity of this projection was verified using two novel null models for testing cell projections: 1) ablated node model, wherein the mapping strength of target cells are evaluated after removal of high mapping score source nodes, and 2) high entropy features model, which rules out the background noise effect. By separating Flt3+ and Flt3- cells prior to activation of the fusion gene and performing in vitro replating assays, we could demonstrate that Flt3+ GMLPs contained 3-4 fold more leukemia-initiating cells (1/1.34 cells) than Flt3- GMLPs (1/4.89 cells), indicating that leukemia-initiating cells within GMLPs express Flt3. Taken together, Nabo represents a robust cell projection strategy for relevant analysis of scRNA-Seq data that permits an interpretable inference of cross-population relationships. Nabo is designed to compare disparate cellular populations by using the heterogeneity of one population as a point of reference allowing for cell-type specification even following perturbations that have resulted in large molecular changes to the cells of interest. As such, Nabo has critical implementation for delineation of leukemia heterogeneity and identification of leukemia-initiating cell population. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 114 (18) ◽  
pp. E3659-E3668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Wiegand ◽  
Jonathan Spindler ◽  
Feiyu F. Hong ◽  
Wei Shao ◽  
Joshua C. Cyktor ◽  
...  

Little is known about the fraction of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) proviruses that express unspliced viral RNA in vivo or about the levels of HIV RNA expression within single infected cells. We developed a sensitive cell-associated HIV RNA and DNA single-genome sequencing (CARD-SGS) method to investigate fractional proviral expression of HIV RNA (1.3-kb fragment of p6, protease, and reverse transcriptase) and the levels of HIV RNA in single HIV-infected cells from blood samples obtained from individuals with viremia or individuals on long-term suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART). Spiking experiments show that the CARD-SGS method can detect a single cell expressing HIV RNA. Applying CARD-SGS to blood mononuclear cells in six samples from four HIV-infected donors (one with viremia and not on ART and three with viremia suppressed on ART) revealed that an average of 7% of proviruses (range: 2–18%) expressed HIV RNA. Levels of expression varied from one to 62 HIV RNA molecules per cell (median of 1). CARD-SGS also revealed the frequent expression of identical HIV RNA sequences across multiple single cells and across multiple time points in donors on suppressive ART consistent with constitutive expression of HIV RNA in infected cell clones. Defective proviruses were found to express HIV RNA at levels similar to those proviruses that had no obvious defects. CARD-SGS is a useful tool to characterize fractional proviral expression in single infected cells that persist despite ART and to assess the impact of experimental interventions on proviral populations and their expression.


Blood ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 75 (10) ◽  
pp. 1941-1946 ◽  
Author(s):  
H Ema ◽  
T Suda ◽  
Y Miura ◽  
H Nakauchi

Abstract To characterize human hematopoietic progenitors, we performed methylcellulose cultures of single cells isolated from a population of CD34+ cells by fluorescence-activated cell-sorting (FACS) clone-sorting system. CD34+ cells were detected in bone marrow (BM) and peripheral blood (PB) cells at incidences of 1.0% and 0.01% of total mononuclear cells, respectively. Single cell cultures revealed that approximately 37% of BM CD34+ cells formed colonies in the presence of phytohemagglutinin-leukocyte conditioned medium and erythropoietin. Erythroid bursts-, granulocyte-macrophage (GM) colony-, and pure macrophage (Mac) colony-forming cells were 10% each in CD34+ cells. Approximately 15% of PB CD34+ cells formed colonies in which erythroid bursts were predominant. CD34+ cells were heterogeneous and fractionated by several antibodies in FACS multicolor analysis. In these fractionated cells, CD34+, CD33+ cells formed GM and Mac colonies 7 to 10 times as often as CD34+, CD33- cells. Most of the erythroid bursts and colonies were observed in the fraction of CD34+, CD13- cells or CD34+, CD33- cells. The expression of HLA-DR on CD34+ cells was not related to the incidence, size, or type of colonies. There was no difference in the phenotypical heterogeneity of CD34+ cells between BM and PB. About 10% of CD34+ cells were able to form G colonies in response to granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) and to form Mac colonies in GM-CSF or interleukin-3 (IL-3). Progenitors capable of generating colonies by stimulation of G-CSF were more enriched in CD34+, CD33+ fraction than in CD34+, CD33- fraction. Thus, single cell cultures using the FACS clone-sorting system provide an accurate estimation of hematopoietic progenitors and an assay system for direct action of colony-stimulating factors.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph Patrick ◽  
David T. Humphreys ◽  
Vaibhao Janbandhu ◽  
Alicia Oshlack ◽  
Joshua W.K. Ho ◽  
...  

AbstractHigh-throughput single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) is a powerful tool for studying gene expression in single cells. Most current scRNA-seq bioinformatics tools focus on analysing overall expression levels, largely ignoring alternative mRNA isoform expression. We present a computational pipeline, Sierra, that readily detects differential transcript usage from data generated by commonly used polyA-captured scRNA-seq technology. We validate Sierra by comparing cardiac scRNA-seq cell-types to bulk RNA-seq of matched populations, finding significant overlap in differential transcripts. Sierra detects differential transcript usage across human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and the Tabula Muris, and 3’UTR shortening in cardiac fibroblasts. Sierra is available at https://github.com/VCCRI/Sierra.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navpreet Ranu ◽  
Alexandra-Chloé Villani ◽  
Nir Hacohen ◽  
Paul C. Blainey

There is rising interest in applying single-cell transcriptome analysis and other single-cell sequencing methods to resolve differences between cells. Pooled processing of thousands of single cells is now routinely practiced by introducing cell-specific DNA barcodes early in cell processing protocols1-5. However, researchers must sequence a large number of cells to sample rare subpopulations6-8, even when fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) is used to pre-enrich rare cell populations. Here, a new molecular enrichment method is used in conjunction with FACS enrichment to enable efficient sampling of rare dendritic cell (DC) populations, including the recently identified AXL+SIGLEC6+ (AS DCs) subset7, within a 10X Genomics single-cell RNA-Seq library. DC populations collectively represent 1-2% of total peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), with AS DC representing only 1-3% of human blood DCs and 0.01-0.06% of total PBMCs.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenkai Han ◽  
Yuqi Cheng ◽  
Jiayang Chen ◽  
Huawen Zhong ◽  
Zhihang Hu ◽  
...  

Single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) has become a powerful tool to reveal the complex biological diversity and heterogeneity among cell populations. However, the technical noise and bias of the technology still have negative impacts on the downstream analysis. Here, we present a self-supervised Contrastive LEArning framework for scRNA-seq (CLEAR) profile representation and the downstream analysis. CLEAR overcomes the heterogeneity of the experimental data with a specifically designed representation learning task and thus can handle batch effects and dropout events. In the task, the deep learning model learns to pull together the representations of similar cells while pushing apart distinct cells, without manual labeling. It achieves superior performance on a broad range of fundamental tasks, including clustering, visualization, dropout correction, batch effect removal, and pseudo-time inference. The proposed method successfully identifies and illustrates inflammatory-related mechanisms in a COVID-19 disease study with 43,695 single cells from peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Further experiments to process a million-scale single-cell dataset demonstrate the scalability of CLEAR. This scalable method generates effective scRNA-seq data representation while eliminating technical noise, and it will serve as a general computational framework for single-cell data analysis.


eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Delia Ricolo ◽  
Sofia J Araujo

Subcellular lumen formation by single-cells involves complex cytoskeletal remodelling. We have previously shown that centrosomes are key players in the initiation of subcellular lumen formation in Drosophila melanogaster, but not much is known on the what leads to the growth of these subcellular luminal branches or makes them progress through a particular trajectory within the cytoplasm. Here, we have identified that the spectraplakin Short-stop (Shot) promotes the crosstalk between MTs and actin, which leads to the extension and guidance of the subcellular lumen within the tracheal terminal cell (TC) cytoplasm. Shot is enriched in cells undergoing the initial steps of subcellular branching as a direct response to FGF signalling. An excess of Shot induces ectopic acentrosomal luminal branching points in the embryonic and larval tracheal TC leading to cells with extra-subcellular lumina. These data provide the first evidence for a role for spectraplakins in single-cell lumen formation and branching.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenifer Vallejo ◽  
Ryosuke Saigusa ◽  
Rishab Gulati ◽  
Yanal Ghosheh ◽  
Christopher P. Durant ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundHIV-infected people have an increased risk of atherosclerosis-based cardiovascular disease (CVD), even when the HIV virus is fully controlled. Both chronic HIV infection and CVD are chronic inflammatory diseases. The interaction between these two diseases is not well understood.MethodsThe Women’s Interagency HIV Study (WIHS) collected peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and data on subclinical CVD defined by carotid artery ultrasound from HIV-infected women. We interrogated 32 PBMC samples using combined protein and transcript panel single cell (sc) RNA sequencing of women without HIV or CVD, with HIV only, with HIV and CVD, and with HIV and CVD treated with cholesterol-lowering drugs. Expression of 40 surface markers enabled detailed analysis of all major cell types, resolving 58 clusters in almost 42,000 single cells.ResultsMany clusters including 5 of 8 classical monocyte clusters showed significantly different gene expression between the groups of participants, revealing the inflammatory signatures of HIV, CVD and their interactions. Genes highly upregulated by CVD included CCL3, CCL4 and IL-32, whereas CXCL2 and 3 were more highly upregulated by HIV. Many genes were synergistically upregulated by HIV and CVD, but others were antagonistically regulated, revealing that the gene signature in people with HIV and CVD is not simply the sum of the HIV and CVD signatures. Elevated expression of most inflammatory genes was reversed by cholesterol control (statin treatment). The cell numbers in 3 of 5 intermediate monocyte subsets, 1 of 14 CD8 T cell subsets, 1 of 6 B cell subsets and 1 of 6 NK cell subsets showed significant changes with HIV or CVD.ConclusionsWe conclude that HIV and CVD show interactive inflammatory signatures including chemokines and cytokines that are improved by cholesterol-lowering drugs.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose Alquicira-Hernandez ◽  
Anuja Sathe ◽  
Hanlee P. Ji ◽  
Quan Nguyen ◽  
Joseph E. Powell

AbstractSingle-cell RNA sequencing has enabled the characterization of highly specific cell types in many tissues, as well as both primary and stem cell-derived cell lines. An important facet of these studies is the ability to identify the transcriptional signatures that define a cell type or state. In theory, this information can be used to classify an individual cell based on its transcriptional profile. Here, we present scPred, a new generalizable method that is able to provide highly accurate classification of single cells, using a combination of unbiased feature selection from a reduced-dimension space, and machine-learning probability-based prediction method. We apply scPred to scRNA-seq data from pancreatic tissue, mononuclear cells, colorectal tumor biopsies, and circulating dendritic cells and show that scPred is able to classify individual cells with high accuracy. The generalized method is available at https://github.com/powellgenomicslab/scPred/.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. S42-S42
Author(s):  
Miguel Reyes ◽  
Roby P Bhattacharyya ◽  
Michael Filbin ◽  
Kianna Billman ◽  
Thomas Eisenhaure ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Despite intense efforts to understand the immunopathology of sepsis, no clinically reliable diagnostic biomarkers exist. Multiple whole-blood gene expression studies have sought sepsis-associated molecular signatures, but these have not yet resolved immune phenomena at the cellular level. Using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) to profile peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), we identified a novel cellular state enriched in patients with sepsis. Methods We performed scRNA-Seq on PBMCs from 26 patients with sepsis and 47 controls at two hospitals (mean age 57.5 years, SD 16.6; 54% male; 82% white), analyzing >200,000 single cells in total on a 10× Genomics platform. We identified immune cell states by stepwise clustering, first to identify the major immune cell types, then clustering each cell type into substates. Substate abundances were compared between cases and controls using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test. Results We identified 18 immune cell substates (Figure 1a), including a novel CD14+ monocyte substate (MS1) that is enriched in patients with sepsis (Figure 1b). The fractional abundance of the MS1 substate alone (ROC AUC 0.88) outperformed published bulk transcriptional signatures in identifying sepsis (AUC 0.68–0.82) across our clinical cohorts. Deconvolution of publicly available bulk transcriptional data to infer the abundance of the MS1 substate externally validated its accuracy in predicting sepsis of various etiologies across diverse geographic locations (Figure 1c), matching the best previously identified bulk signatures. Flow cytometry using cell surface markers unique to MS1 confirmed its marked expansion in sepsis, facilitating quantitation and isolation of this substate for further study. Conclusion This study demonstrates the utility of scRNA-Seq in discovering disease-associated cytologic signatures in blood and identifies a cell state signature for sepsis in patients with bacterial infections. This novel monocyte substate matched the performance of the best bulk transcriptional signatures in classifying patients as septic, and pointed to a specific cell state for further molecular and functional characterization of sepsis immunopathogenesis. Disclosures All Authors: No reported Disclosures.


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