4.5 Article

Quantitative single-cell interactomes in normal and virus-infected mouse lungs

Journal

DISEASE MODELS & MECHANISMS
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dmm.044404

Keywords

scRNA-seq; Ligand-receptor interaction; Bioinformatics; Lung viral injury

Funding

  1. University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01HL130129]
  3. Cancer Center Support Grant (CA) from the NIH [16672]

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Mammalian organs consist of diverse, intermixed cell types that signal to each other via ligand-receptor interactions - an interactome - to ensure development, homeostasis and injury-repair. Dissecting such intercellular interactions is facilitated by rapidly growing single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) data; however, existing computational methods are often not readily adaptable by bench scientists without advanced programming skills. Here, we describe a quantitative intuitive algorithm, coupled with an optimized experimental protocol, to construct and compare interactomes in control and Sendai virus-infected mouse lungs. A minimum of 90 cells per cell type compensates for the known gene dropout issue in scRNA-seq and achieves comparable sensitivity to bulk RNA sequencing. Cell lineage normalization after cell sorting allows cost-efficient representation of cell types of interest. A numeric representation of ligand-receptor interactions identifies, as outliers, known and potentially new interactions as well as changes upon viral infection. Our experimental and computational approaches can be generalized to other organs and human samples.

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