An Optimized Tissue Dissociation Protocol for Single-Cell RNA Sequencing Analysis of Fresh and Cultured Human Skin Biopsies

Blaž Burja(University of Ljubljana), Dominique Paul(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Aizhan Tastanova(University of Zurich), Sam G. Edalat(University of Zurich), Reto Gerber(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Miranda Houtman(University of Zurich), Muriel Elhaï(University of Zurich), Kristina Bürki(University of Zurich), Ramon Staeger(University of Zurich), Gaetana Restivo(University of Zurich), Ramon Lang(University of Zurich), Snežna Sodin‐Šemrl(Ljubljana University Medical Centre), Katja Lakota(Ljubljana University Medical Centre), Matija Tomšič(University of Ljubljana), Mitchell P. Levesque(University of Zurich), Oliver Distler(University of Zurich), Žiga Rotar(University of Ljubljana), Mark D. Robinson(SIB Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics), Mojca Frank‐Bertoncelj(University of Zurich)
Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
April 28, 2022
Cited by 43Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We present an optimized dissociation protocol for preparing high-quality skin cell suspensions for in-depth single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) analysis of fresh and cultured human skin. Our protocol enabled the isolation of a consistently high number of highly viable skin cells from small freshly dissociated punch skin biopsies, which we use for scRNA-seq studies. We recapitulated not only the main cell populations of existing single-cell skin atlases, but also identified rare cell populations, such as mast cells. Furthermore, we effectively isolated highly viable single cells from ex vivo cultured skin biopsy fragments and generated a global single-cell map of the explanted human skin. The quality metrics of the generated scRNA-seq datasets were comparable between freshly dissociated and cultured skin. Overall, by enabling efficient cell isolation and comprehensive cell mapping, our skin dissociation-scRNA-seq workflow can greatly facilitate scRNA-seq discoveries across diverse human skin pathologies and ex vivo skin explant experimentations.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis