Discovering paracrine regulators of cell type composition from spatial transcriptomics using SPER
Tianxiao Zhao, Adam L Haber

TL;DR
This paper introduces SPER, a new method to identify genes that regulate cell type composition in tissues using spatial transcriptomics data.
Contribution
SPER is the first method to systematically identify paracrine regulators of cell type composition from spatial transcriptomics.
Findings
SPER accurately detects paracrine drivers of cellular abundance in simulated data.
Genes identified by SPER are enriched for extracellular secretion and receptor-ligand interactions.
SPER's results are validated using spatial transcriptomics data from mouse brain and human lung.
Abstract
A defining characteristic of biological tissue is its cell type composition. Many pathologies and chronic diseases are associated with perturbations from the homeostatic composition, and these transformations can lead to aberrant or deleterious tissue function. Spatial transcriptomics enables the concurrent measurement of gene expression and cell type composition, providing an opportunity to identify transcripts that co-vary with and potentially influence nearby cell composition. However, no method yet exists to systematically identify such intercellular regulatory factors. Here, we develop Spatial Paired Expression Ratio (SPER), a computational approach to evaluate the spatial dependence between transcript abundance and cell type proportions in spatial transcriptomics. We demonstrate the ability of SPER to accurately detect paracrine drivers of cellular abundance using simulated data.…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
Figure 5
Figure 6Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomics · Gene expression and cancer classification · Cell Image Analysis Techniques
