Reconstructing the Developmental Trajectories of Multiple Subtypes in Pulmonary Parenchymal Epithelial Cells by Single-Cell RNA-seq

Huang, Yiwei and Zheng, Yuansheng and Yin, Jiacheng and Lu, Tao and Li, Ming and Liang, Jiaqi and Hu, Zhengyang and Bi, Guoshu and Zhan, Cheng and Xue, Liang and Jiang, Wei and Wang, Qun (2020) Reconstructing the Developmental Trajectories of Multiple Subtypes in Pulmonary Parenchymal Epithelial Cells by Single-Cell RNA-seq. Frontiers in Genetics, 11. ISSN 1664-8021

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Abstract

Background: Some lung diseases are cell type-specific. It is essential to study the cellular anatomy of the normal human lung for exploring the cellular origin of lung disease and the cell development trajectory.

Methods: We used the Seurat R package for data quality control. The principal component analysis (PCA) was used for linear dimensionality reduction. UMAP and tSNE were used for dimensionality reduction. Muonocle2 was used to extract lung epithelial cells to analyze the subtypes of epithelial cells further and to study the development of these cell subtypes.

Results: We showed a total of 20154 high quality of cells from human normal lung tissue. They were initially divided into 17 clusters cells and then identified as seven types of cells, namely macrophages, monocytes, CD8 + T cells, epithelial cells, endothelial cells, adipocytes, and NK cells. 4240 epithelial cells were extracted for further analysis and they were divided into seven clusters. The seven cell clusters include alveolar cell, alveolar endothelial progenitor, ciliated cell, secretory cell, ionocyte cell, and a group of cells that are not clear at present. We show the development track of these subtypes of epithelial cells, in which we speculate that alveolar epithelial progenitor (AEP) is a kind of progenitor cells that can develop into alveolar cells, and find six essential genes that determine the cell fate, including AGER, RPL10, RPL9, RPS18, RPS27, and SFTPB.

Conclusion: We provide a transcription map of human lung cells, especially the in-depth study on the development of epithelial cell subtypes, which will help us to study lung cell biology and lung diseases.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Open Library Press > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@openlibrarypress.com
Date Deposited: 30 Jan 2023 10:02
Last Modified: 09 May 2024 12:30
URI: http://info.euro-archives.com/id/eprint/362

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