De novo prediction of stem cell identity using single-cell transcriptome data

D Grün, MJ Muraro, JC Boisset, K Wiebrands… - Cell stem cell, 2016 - cell.com
D Grün, MJ Muraro, JC Boisset, K Wiebrands, A Lyubimova, G Dharmadhikari
Cell stem cell, 2016cell.com
Adult mitotic tissues like the intestine, skin, and blood undergo constant turnover throughout
the life of an organism. Knowing the identity of the stem cell is crucial to understanding
tissue homeostasis and its aberrations upon disease. Here we present a computational
method for the derivation of a lineage tree from single-cell transcriptome data. By exploiting
the tree topology and the transcriptome composition, we establish StemID, an algorithm for
identifying stem cells among all detectable cell types within a population. We demonstrate …
Summary
Adult mitotic tissues like the intestine, skin, and blood undergo constant turnover throughout the life of an organism. Knowing the identity of the stem cell is crucial to understanding tissue homeostasis and its aberrations upon disease. Here we present a computational method for the derivation of a lineage tree from single-cell transcriptome data. By exploiting the tree topology and the transcriptome composition, we establish StemID, an algorithm for identifying stem cells among all detectable cell types within a population. We demonstrate that StemID recovers two known adult stem cell populations, Lgr5+ cells in the small intestine and hematopoietic stem cells in the bone marrow. We apply StemID to predict candidate multipotent cell populations in the human pancreas, a tissue with largely uncharacterized turnover dynamics. We hope that StemID will accelerate the search for novel stem cells by providing concrete markers for biological follow-up and validation.
cell.com
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果