Publications by authors named "Mamanova L"

Positional coding along the anterior-posterior axis is regulated by HOX genes, whose 3' to 5' expression correlates with location along this axis. The precise utilisation of HOX genes in different human cell types is not fully understood. Here, we use single-cell and spatial-transcriptomics, along with in-situ sequencing, to create a developmental atlas of the human fetal spine.

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  • The study investigates early cellular responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection using single-cell profiling in individuals with no prior immunity to the virus.
  • Significant changes in cell types and immune responses were observed over time, indicating different patterns of infection severity, especially in nasopharyngeal regions.
  • Key findings suggest that early interferon responses and specific immune cell behaviors, like high expression of HLA-DQA2, could be crucial in preventing sustained infections, while a novel computational tool, Cell2TCR, enhanced the analysis of T cell responses.
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Children infected with SARS-CoV-2 rarely progress to respiratory failure. However, the risk of mortality in infected people over 85 years of age remains high. Here we investigate differences in the cellular landscape and function of paediatric (<12 years), adult (30-50 years) and older adult (>70 years) ex vivo cultured nasal epithelial cells in response to infection with SARS-CoV-2.

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  • The immune system is made up of various cell types that are found in blood and tissues, but research mostly focuses on blood samples, leaving gaps in our understanding of immune variation throughout the body and across different ages.
  • Researchers analyzed RNA and surface protein expression from over 1.25 million immune cells collected from various tissues of 24 organ donors aged 20-75 years to understand these variations better.
  • They discovered that immune cell composition and function varies significantly based on tissue type and age, providing insights into how immune responses can be linked to disease across the human lifespan.
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Studies of human lung development have focused on epithelial and mesenchymal cell types and function, but much less is known about the developing lung immune cells, even though the airways are a major site of mucosal immunity after birth. An unanswered question is whether tissue-resident immune cells play a role in shaping the tissue as it develops in utero. Here, we profiled human embryonic and fetal lung immune cells using scRNA-seq, smFISH, and immunohistochemistry.

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Human limbs emerge during the fourth post-conception week as mesenchymal buds, which develop into fully formed limbs over the subsequent months. This process is orchestrated by numerous temporally and spatially restricted gene expression programmes, making congenital alterations in phenotype common. Decades of work with model organisms have defined the fundamental mechanisms underlying vertebrate limb development, but an in-depth characterization of this process in humans has yet to be performed.

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Single-cell assay for transposase-accessible chromatin by sequencing (scATAC-seq) has emerged as a powerful tool for dissecting regulatory landscapes and cellular heterogeneity. However, an exploration of systemic biases among scATAC-seq technologies has remained absent. In this study, we benchmark the performance of eight scATAC-seq methods across 47 experiments using human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) as a reference sample and develop PUMATAC, a universal preprocessing pipeline, to handle the various sequencing data formats.

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The function of a cell is defined by its intrinsic characteristics and its niche: the tissue microenvironment in which it dwells. Here we combine single-cell and spatial transcriptomics data to discover cellular niches within eight regions of the human heart. We map cells to microanatomical locations and integrate knowledge-based and unsupervised structural annotations.

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  • Single-cell transcriptomics has advanced our understanding of cell types in the human lung, but how these cells are arranged in tissue is still being explored.
  • Researchers studied five locations in healthy human lungs, utilizing multi-omic techniques to uncover complex tissue structures and new cell types across different lung microenvironments.
  • They found that peribronchial fibroblasts are involved in lung disease and discovered a special niche in airway submucosal glands that helps IgA plasma cells thrive and produce antibodies, which is important for respiratory health.
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  • A comprehensive multiomic cell atlas of human lung development was created using advanced techniques like single-cell RNA and ATAC sequencing, spatial transcriptomics, and imaging, covering a developmental period from 5 to 22 post-conception weeks.
  • The study identified previously unknown cell types across various lung compartments, including specific progenitor cells and a neuroendocrine cell subtype linked to small cell lung cancer.
  • The data is accessible online for research purposes, and the atlas enabled predictions about cell interactions and transcription factors, which were tested using organoid models.
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Tumor behavior is intricately dependent on the oncogenic properties of cancer cells and their multi-cellular interactions. To understand these dependencies within the wider microenvironment, we studied over 270,000 single-cell transcriptomes and 100 microdissected whole exomes from 12 patients with kidney tumors, prior to validation using spatial transcriptomics. Tissues were sampled from multiple regions of the tumor core, the tumor-normal interface, normal surrounding tissues, and peripheral blood.

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Despite their crucial role in health and disease, our knowledge of immune cells within human tissues remains limited. We surveyed the immune compartment of 16 tissues from 12 adult donors by single-cell RNA sequencing and VDJ sequencing generating a dataset of ~360,000 cells. To systematically resolve immune cell heterogeneity across tissues, we developed CellTypist, a machine learning tool for rapid and precise cell type annotation.

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Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID), the most prevalent symptomatic primary immunodeficiency, displays impaired terminal B-cell differentiation and defective antibody responses. Incomplete genetic penetrance and ample phenotypic expressivity in CVID suggest the participation of additional pathogenic mechanisms. Monozygotic (MZ) twins discordant for CVID are uniquely valuable for studying the contribution of epigenetics to the disease.

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  • Researchers analyzed 93 pediatric and adult COVID-19 patients alongside healthy controls to understand why COVID-19 is milder in children.
  • They found heightened interferon-activated cells in the airways of healthy children, leading to stronger immune responses that may limit viral replication.
  • The study suggests that children's immune responses differ significantly from adults, with a unique pattern of lymphocyte activity and interferon signaling that contributes to less severe illness.
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Multimodal data is rapidly growing in many fields of science and engineering, including single-cell biology. We introduce MultiMAP, a novel algorithm for dimensionality reduction and integration. MultiMAP can integrate any number of datasets, leverages features not present in all datasets, is not restricted to a linear mapping, allows the user to specify the influence of each dataset, and is extremely scalable to large datasets.

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The cellular landscape of the human intestinal tract is dynamic throughout life, developing in utero and changing in response to functional requirements and environmental exposures. Here, to comprehensively map cell lineages, we use single-cell RNA sequencing and antigen receptor analysis of almost half a million cells from up to 5 anatomical regions in the developing and up to 11 distinct anatomical regions in the healthy paediatric and adult human gut. This reveals the existence of transcriptionally distinct BEST4 epithelial cells throughout the human intestinal tract.

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  • The study analyzes 1300 kidney tumors from both children and adults to investigate their gene expression patterns and origins, using single-cell mRNA maps of normal tissues.
  • It reveals that childhood kidney tumors show signs of fetal immaturity, challenging the idea that they revert to a fetal state, while adult cancers do not demonstrate this dedifferentiation.
  • The research highlights a strong link between developmental mesenchymal cells and childhood renal tumors, offering new diagnostic insights and establishing a cellular framework for understanding human renal cancers.
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The transcription factor Rora has been shown to be important for the development of ILC2 and the regulation of ILC3, macrophages and Treg cells. Here we investigate the role of Rora across CD4+ T cells in general, but with an emphasis on Th2 cells, both in vitro as well as in the context of several in vivo type 2 infection models. We dissect the function of Rora using overexpression and a CD4-conditional Rora-knockout mouse, as well as a RORA-reporter mouse.

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Existing protocols for full-length single-cell RNA sequencing produce libraries of high complexity (thousands of distinct genes) with outstanding sensitivity and specificity of transcript quantification. These full-length libraries have the advantage of allowing probing of transcript isoforms, are informative regarding single-nucleotide polymorphisms and allow assembly of the VDJ region of the T- and B-cell-receptor sequences. Since full-length protocols are mostly plate-based at present, they are also suited to profiling cell types where cell numbers are limiting, such as rare cell types during development.

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Malignant rhabdoid tumour (MRT) is an often lethal childhood cancer that, like many paediatric tumours, is thought to arise from aberrant fetal development. The embryonic root and differentiation pathways underpinning MRT are not firmly established. Here, we study the origin of MRT by combining phylogenetic analyses and single-cell mRNA studies in patient-derived organoids.

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Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) and accessory proteases (TMPRSS2 and CTSL) are needed for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) cellular entry, and their expression may shed light on viral tropism and impact across the body. We assessed the cell-type-specific expression of ACE2, TMPRSS2 and CTSL across 107 single-cell RNA-sequencing studies from different tissues. ACE2, TMPRSS2 and CTSL are coexpressed in specific subsets of respiratory epithelial cells in the nasal passages, airways and alveoli, and in cells from other organs associated with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) transmission or pathology.

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Neuroblastoma is a childhood cancer that resembles developmental stages of the neural crest. It is not established what developmental processes neuroblastoma cancer cells represent. Here, we sought to reveal the phenotype of neuroblastoma cancer cells by comparing cancer ( = 19,723) with normal fetal adrenal single-cell transcriptomes ( = 57,972).

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Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) is a debilitating immune-mediated inflammatory arthritis of unknown pathogenesis commonly affecting patients with skin psoriasis. Here we use complementary single-cell approaches to study leukocytes from PsA joints. Mass cytometry demonstrates a 3-fold expansion of memory CD8 T cells in the joints of PsA patients compared to peripheral blood.

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