Back to Search Start Over

D-SPIN constructs gene regulatory network models from multiplexed scRNA-seq data revealing organizing principles of cellular perturbation response

Authors :
Jiang, Jialong
Chen, Sisi
Tsou, Tiffany
McGinnis, Christopher S.
Khazaei, Tahmineh
Zhu, Qin
Park, Jong H.
Strazhnik, Inna-Marie
Hanna, John
Chow, Eric D.
Sivak, David A.
Gartner, Zev J.
Thomson, Matt
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Gene regulatory networks within cells modulate the expression of the genome in response to signals and changing environmental conditions. Reconstructions of gene regulatory networks can reveal the information processing and control principles used by cells to maintain homeostasis and execute cell-state transitions. Here, we introduce a computational framework, D-SPIN, that generates quantitative models of generegulatory networks from single-cell mRNA-seq data sets collected across thousands of distinct perturbation conditions. D-SPIN models the cell as a collection of interacting gene-expression programs, and constructs a probabilistic model to infer regulatory interactions between gene-expression programs and external perturbations. Using large Perturb-seq and drug-response datasets, we demonstrate that D-SPIN models reveal the organization of cellular pathways, sub-functions of macromolecular complexes, and the logic of cellular regulation of transcription, translation, metabolism, and protein degradation in response to gene knockdown perturbations. D-SPIN can also be applied to dissect drug response mechanisms in heterogeneous cell populations, elucidating how combinations of immunomodulatory drugs can induce novel cell states through additive recruitment of gene expression programs. D-SPIN provides a computational framework for constructing interpretable models of gene-regulatory networks to reveal principles of cellular information processing and physiological control.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97a49777e4b31ab068e97d3ea14712d9