Back to Search Start Over

Variant to function mapping at single-cell resolution through network propagation

Authors :
Fulong Yu
Liam D. Cato
Chen Weng
L. Alexander Liggett
Soyoung Jeon
Keren Xu
Charleston W. K. Chiang
Joseph L. Wiemels
Jonathan S. Weissman
Adam J. de Smith
Vijay G. Sankaran
Source :
Nature biotechnology, vol 40, iss 11, bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

With burgeoning human disease genetic associations and single-cell genomic atlases covering a range of tissues, there are unprecedented opportunities to systematically gain insights into the mechanisms of disease-causal variation. However, sparsity and noise, particularly in the context of single-cell epigenomic data, hamper the identification of disease- or trait-relevant cell types, states, and trajectories. To overcome these challenges, we have developed the SCAVENGE method, which maps causal variants to their relevant cellular context at single-cell resolution by employing the strategy of network propagation. We demonstrate how SCAVENGE can help identify key biological mechanisms underlying human genetic variation including enrichment of blood traits at distinct stages of human hematopoiesis, defining monocyte subsets that increase the risk for severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), and identifying intermediate lymphocyte developmental states that are critical for predisposition to acute leukemia. Our approach not only provides a framework for enabling variant-to-function insights at single-cell resolution, but also suggests a more general strategy for maximizing the inferences that can be made using single-cell genomic data.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0eabb4ccce17ec1ed0e63ca8a60c5a6e