Deciphering spatial domains from spatial multi-omics with SpatialGlue

Yahui Long(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Kok Siong Ang(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Raman Sethi(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Sha Liao(BGI Group (China)), Yang Heng(BGI Group (China)), Lynn van Olst(Northwestern University), S. Z. Ye(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Chengwei Zhong(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Hang Xu(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Di Zhang(Yale University), Immanuel Kwok(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Nazihah Husna(Agency for Science, Technology and Research), Min Jian(BGI Group (China)), Lai Guan Ng(Shanghai Jiao Tong University), Ao Chen(BGI Group (China)), Nicholas R. J. Gascoigne(National University of Singapore), David Gate(Northwestern University), Rong Fan(Yale University), Xun Xu(BGI Group (China)), Jinmiao Chen(Agency for Science, Technology and Research)
Nature Methods
June 21, 2024
Cited by 136Open Access
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Abstract

Advances in spatial omics technologies now allow multiple types of data to be acquired from the same tissue slice. To realize the full potential of such data, we need spatially informed methods for data integration. Here, we introduce SpatialGlue, a graph neural network model with a dual-attention mechanism that deciphers spatial domains by intra-omics integration of spatial location and omics measurement followed by cross-omics integration. We demonstrated SpatialGlue on data acquired from different tissue types using different technologies, including spatial epigenome-transcriptome and transcriptome-proteome modalities. Compared to other methods, SpatialGlue captured more anatomical details and more accurately resolved spatial domains such as the cortex layers of the brain. Our method also identified cell types like spleen macrophage subsets located at three different zones that were not available in the original data annotations. SpatialGlue scales well with data size and can be used to integrate three modalities. Our spatial multi-omics analysis tool combines the information from complementary omics modalities to obtain a holistic view of cellular and tissue properties.


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