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Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart

BACKGROUND: Global transcriptional profiling of individual cells represents a powerful approach to systematically survey contributions from cell-specific molecular phenotypes to human disease states but requires tissue-specific protocols. Here we sought to comprehensively evaluate protocols for sing...

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Autores principales: Pimpalwar, Neha, Czuba, Tomasz, Smith, Maya Landenhed, Nilsson, Johan, Gidlöf, Olof, Smith, J. Gustav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7779736/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33426328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05810
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author Pimpalwar, Neha
Czuba, Tomasz
Smith, Maya Landenhed
Nilsson, Johan
Gidlöf, Olof
Smith, J. Gustav
author_facet Pimpalwar, Neha
Czuba, Tomasz
Smith, Maya Landenhed
Nilsson, Johan
Gidlöf, Olof
Smith, J. Gustav
author_sort Pimpalwar, Neha
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Global transcriptional profiling of individual cells represents a powerful approach to systematically survey contributions from cell-specific molecular phenotypes to human disease states but requires tissue-specific protocols. Here we sought to comprehensively evaluate protocols for single cell isolation and transcriptional profiling from heart tissue, focusing particularly on frozen tissue which is necessary for study of human hearts at scale. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using flow cytometry and high-content screening, we found that enzymatic dissociation of fresh murine heart tissue resulted in a sufficient yield of intact cells while for frozen murine or human heart resulted in low-quality cell suspensions across a range of protocols. These findings were consistent across enzymatic digestion protocols and whether samples were snap-frozen or treated with RNA-stabilizing agents before freezing. In contrast, we show that isolation of cardiac nuclei from frozen hearts results in a high yield of intact nuclei, and leverage expression arrays to show that nuclear transcriptomes reliably represent the cytoplasmic and whole-cell transcriptomes of the major cardiac cell types. Furthermore, coupling of nuclear isolation to PCM1-gated flow cytometry facilitated specific cardiomyocyte depletion, expanding resolution of the cardiac transcriptome beyond bulk tissue transcriptomes which were most strongly correlated with PCM1(+) transcriptomes (r = 0.8). We applied these methods to generate a transcriptional catalogue of human cardiac cells by droplet-based RNA-sequencing of 8,460 nuclei from which cellular identities were inferred. Reproducibility of identified clusters was confirmed in an independent biopsy (4,760 additional PCM1(-) nuclei) from the same human heart. CONCLUSION: Our results confirm the validity of single-nucleus but not single-cell isolation for transcriptional profiling of individual cells from frozen heart tissue, and establishes PCM1-gating as an efficient tool for cardiomyocyte depletion. In addition, our results provide a perspective of cell types inferred from single-nucleus transcriptomes that are present in an adult human heart.
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spelling pubmed-77797362021-01-08 Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart Pimpalwar, Neha Czuba, Tomasz Smith, Maya Landenhed Nilsson, Johan Gidlöf, Olof Smith, J. Gustav Heliyon Research Article BACKGROUND: Global transcriptional profiling of individual cells represents a powerful approach to systematically survey contributions from cell-specific molecular phenotypes to human disease states but requires tissue-specific protocols. Here we sought to comprehensively evaluate protocols for single cell isolation and transcriptional profiling from heart tissue, focusing particularly on frozen tissue which is necessary for study of human hearts at scale. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using flow cytometry and high-content screening, we found that enzymatic dissociation of fresh murine heart tissue resulted in a sufficient yield of intact cells while for frozen murine or human heart resulted in low-quality cell suspensions across a range of protocols. These findings were consistent across enzymatic digestion protocols and whether samples were snap-frozen or treated with RNA-stabilizing agents before freezing. In contrast, we show that isolation of cardiac nuclei from frozen hearts results in a high yield of intact nuclei, and leverage expression arrays to show that nuclear transcriptomes reliably represent the cytoplasmic and whole-cell transcriptomes of the major cardiac cell types. Furthermore, coupling of nuclear isolation to PCM1-gated flow cytometry facilitated specific cardiomyocyte depletion, expanding resolution of the cardiac transcriptome beyond bulk tissue transcriptomes which were most strongly correlated with PCM1(+) transcriptomes (r = 0.8). We applied these methods to generate a transcriptional catalogue of human cardiac cells by droplet-based RNA-sequencing of 8,460 nuclei from which cellular identities were inferred. Reproducibility of identified clusters was confirmed in an independent biopsy (4,760 additional PCM1(-) nuclei) from the same human heart. CONCLUSION: Our results confirm the validity of single-nucleus but not single-cell isolation for transcriptional profiling of individual cells from frozen heart tissue, and establishes PCM1-gating as an efficient tool for cardiomyocyte depletion. In addition, our results provide a perspective of cell types inferred from single-nucleus transcriptomes that are present in an adult human heart. Elsevier 2020-12-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7779736/ /pubmed/33426328 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05810 Text en © 2020 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Pimpalwar, Neha
Czuba, Tomasz
Smith, Maya Landenhed
Nilsson, Johan
Gidlöf, Olof
Smith, J. Gustav
Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
title Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
title_full Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
title_fullStr Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
title_full_unstemmed Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
title_short Methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
title_sort methods for isolation and transcriptional profiling of individual cells from the human heart
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7779736/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33426328
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e05810
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