Dissection of artifactual and confounding glial signatures by single-cell sequencing of mouse and human brain

Samuel E. Marsh(Broad Institute), Alec J. Walker(Broad Institute), Tushar Kamath(Broad Institute), Lasse Dissing‐Olesen(Broad Institute), Timothy R. Hammond(Broad Institute), T. Yvanka de Soysa(Broad Institute), Adam M. H. Young(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Sarah Louise Murphy(Boston Children's Hospital), Abdulraouf Abdulraouf(Broad Institute), Naeem Nadaf(Broad Institute), Connor Dufort(Boston Children's Hospital), Alicia C. Walker(Broad Institute), Liliana E. Lucca(Yale University), Velina Kozareva(Broad Institute), Charles Vanderburg(Broad Institute), Soyon Hong(UK Dementia Research Institute), Harry Bulstrode(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Peter J. Hutchinson(University of Cambridge), Daniel J. Gaffney(Wellcome Sanger Institute), David A. Hafler(Broad Institute), Robin J.M. Franklin(Wellcome/MRC Cambridge Stem Cell Institute), Evan Z. Macosko(Broad Institute), Beth Stevens(Broad Institute)
Nature Neuroscience
March 1, 2022
Cited by 439Open Access
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Abstract

A key aspect of nearly all single-cell sequencing experiments is dissociation of intact tissues into single-cell suspensions. While many protocols have been optimized for optimal cell yield, they have often overlooked the effects that dissociation can have on ex vivo gene expression. Here, we demonstrate that use of enzymatic dissociation on brain tissue induces an aberrant ex vivo gene expression signature, most prominently in microglia, which is prevalent in published literature and can substantially confound downstream analyses. To address this issue, we present a rigorously validated protocol that preserves both in vivo transcriptional profiles and cell-type diversity and yield across tissue types and species. We also identify a similar signature in postmortem human brain single-nucleus RNA-sequencing datasets, and show that this signature is induced in freshly isolated human tissue by exposure to elevated temperatures ex vivo. Together, our results provide a methodological solution for preventing artifactual gene expression changes during fresh tissue digestion and a reference for future deeper analysis of the potential confounding states present in postmortem human samples.


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