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Stefano Abbiati

Max Delbrück Center

Publishes on Single-cell and spatial transcriptomics, Immune cells in cancer, T-cell and B-cell Immunology. 2 papers and 211 citations.

2Publications
211Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Open-ST: High-resolution spatial transcriptomics in 3D
Cited by 189Open Access

Spatial transcriptomics (ST) methods unlock molecular mechanisms underlying tissue development, homeostasis, or disease. However, there is a need for easy-to-use, high-resolution, cost-efficient, and 3D-scalable methods. Here, we report Open-ST, a sequencing-based, open-source experimental and computational resource to address these challenges and to study the molecular organization of tissues in 2D and 3D. In mouse brain, Open-ST captured transcripts at subcellular resolution and reconstructed cell types. In primary head-and-neck tumors and patient-matched healthy/metastatic lymph nodes, Open-ST captured the diversity of immune, stromal, and tumor populations in space, validated by imaging-based ST. Distinct cell states were organized around cell-cell communication hotspots in the tumor but not the metastasis. Strikingly, the 3D reconstruction and multimodal analysis of the metastatic lymph node revealed spatially contiguous structures not visible in 2D and potential biomarkers precisely at the 3D tumor/lymph node boundary. All protocols and software are available at https://rajewsky-lab.github.io/openst.

Open-ST: High-resolution spatial transcriptomics in 3D
Marie Schott, Daniel León-Periñán, Elena Splendiani et al.|bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)|2023
Cited by 26Open Access

Abstract Spatial transcriptomics (ST) methods have been developed to unlock molecular mechanisms underlying tissue development, homeostasis, or disease. However, there is a need for easy-to-use, high-resolution, cost-efficient, and 3D-scalable methods. Here, we report Open-ST, a sequencing-based, open-source experimental and computational resource to address these challenges and to study the molecular organization of tissues in 3D. In mouse brain, Open-ST captured transcripts at subcellular resolution and reconstructed cell types. In primary tumor and patient-matched healthy/metastatic lymph nodes, Open-ST captured the diversity of immune, stromal and tumor populations in space. Distinct cell states were organized around cell-cell communication hotspots in the tumor, but not the metastasis. Strikingly, the 3D reconstruction and multimodal analysis of the metastatic lymph node revealed spatially contiguous structures not visible in 2D and potential biomarkers precisely at the 3D tumor/lymph node boundary. We anticipate Open-ST to accelerate the identification of spatial molecular mechanisms in 2D and 3D.