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Population-level integration of single-cell datasets enables multi-scale analysis across samples

View ORCID ProfileCarlo De Donno, Soroor Hediyeh-Zadeh, Marco Wagenstetter, Amir Ali Moinfar, View ORCID ProfileLuke Zappia, View ORCID ProfileMohammad Lotfollahi, View ORCID ProfileFabian J. Theis
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.28.517803
Carlo De Donno
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
2School of Life Sciences Weihenstephan, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany
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  • ORCID record for Carlo De Donno
Soroor Hediyeh-Zadeh
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
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Marco Wagenstetter
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
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Amir Ali Moinfar
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
2School of Life Sciences Weihenstephan, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany
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Luke Zappia
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
4Department of Mathematics, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany
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Mohammad Lotfollahi
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
3Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Cambridge, UK
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  • For correspondence: ml19@sanger.ac.uk fabian.theis@helmholtz-muenchen.de
Fabian J. Theis
1Institute of Computational Biology, Helmholtz Center Munich, Munich, Germany
2School of Life Sciences Weihenstephan, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany
3Wellcome Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Cambridge, UK
4Department of Mathematics, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany
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  • ORCID record for Fabian J. Theis
  • For correspondence: ml19@sanger.ac.uk fabian.theis@helmholtz-muenchen.de
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Abstract

The increasing generation of population-level single-cell atlases with hundreds or thousands of samples has the potential to link demographic and technical metadata with high-resolution cellular and tissue data in homeostasis and disease. Constructing such comprehensive references requires large-scale integration of heterogeneous cohorts with varying metadata capturing demographic and technical information. Here, we present single-cell population level integration (scPoli), a semi-supervised conditional deep generative model for data integration, label transfer and query-to-reference mapping. Unlike other models, scPoli learns both sample and cell representations, is aware of cell-type annotations and can integrate and annotate newly generated query datasets while providing an uncertainty mechanism to identify unknown populations. We extensively evaluated the method and showed its advantages over existing approaches. We applied scPoli to two population-level atlases of lung and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), the latter consisting of roughly 8 million cells across 2,375 samples. We demonstrate that scPoli allows atlas-level integration and automatic reference mapping with label transfer. It can explain sample-level biological and technical variations such as disease, anatomical location and assay by means of its novel sample embeddings. We use these embeddings to explore sample-level metadata, enable automatic sample classification and guide a data integration workflow. scPoli also enables simultaneous sample-level and cell-level analysis of gene expression patterns, revealing genes associated with batch effects and the main axes of between-sample variation. We envision scPoli becoming an important tool for population-level single-cell data integration facilitating atlas use but also interpretation by means of multi-scale analyses.

Competing Interest Statement

F.J.T. consults for Immunai Inc., Singularity Bio B.V., CytoReason Ltd, and Omniscope Ltd, and has ownership interest in Dermagnostix GmbH and Cellarity. C.D. is a part-time employee of Immunai, Inc.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted November 29, 2022.
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Population-level integration of single-cell datasets enables multi-scale analysis across samples
Carlo De Donno, Soroor Hediyeh-Zadeh, Marco Wagenstetter, Amir Ali Moinfar, Luke Zappia, Mohammad Lotfollahi, Fabian J. Theis
bioRxiv 2022.11.28.517803; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.28.517803
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Population-level integration of single-cell datasets enables multi-scale analysis across samples
Carlo De Donno, Soroor Hediyeh-Zadeh, Marco Wagenstetter, Amir Ali Moinfar, Luke Zappia, Mohammad Lotfollahi, Fabian J. Theis
bioRxiv 2022.11.28.517803; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.11.28.517803

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