Bulk brain tissue cell-type deconvolution with bias correction for single-nuclei RNA sequencing data using DeTREM
Date
2023-09-19
Authors
O'Neill, Nicholas K.
Stein, Thor D.
Hu, Junming
Rehman, Habbiburr
Campbell, Joshua David
Yajima, Masanao
Zhang, Xiaoling
Farrer, Lindsay A.
Version
Published version
OA Version
Citation
N.K. O'Neill, T.D. Stein, J. Hu, H. Rehman, J.D. Campbell, M. Yajima, X. Zhang, L.A. Farrer. 2023. "Bulk brain tissue cell-type deconvolution with bias correction for single-nuclei RNA sequencing data using DeTREM." BMC Bioinformatics, Volume 24, Issue 1, pp.349-. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12859-023-05476-w
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Quantifying cell-type abundance in bulk tissue RNA-sequencing enables researchers to better understand complex systems. Newer deconvolution methodologies, such as MuSiC, use cell-type signatures derived from single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) data to make these calculations. Single-nuclei RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) reference data can be used instead of scRNA-seq data for tissues such as human brain where single-cell data are difficult to obtain, but accuracy suffers due to sequencing differences between the technologies. RESULTS: We propose a modification to MuSiC entitled 'DeTREM' which compensates for sequencing differences between the cell-type signature and bulk RNA-seq datasets in order to better predict cell-type fractions. We show DeTREM to be more accurate than MuSiC in simulated and real human brain bulk RNA-sequencing datasets with various cell-type abundance estimates. We also compare DeTREM to SCDC and CIBERSORTx, two recent deconvolution methods that use scRNA-seq cell-type signatures. We find that they perform well in simulated data but produce less accurate results than DeTREM when used to deconvolute human brain data. CONCLUSION: DeTREM improves the deconvolution accuracy of MuSiC and outperforms other deconvolution methods when applied to snRNA-seq data. DeTREM enables accurate cell-type deconvolution in situations where scRNA-seq data are not available. This modification improves characterization cell-type specific effects in brain tissue and identification of cell-type abundance differences under various conditions.
Description
License
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