| Literature DB >> 29871632 |
Benjamin E Mead1,2,3,4,5, Jose Ordovas-Montanes6,7,8,9,10, Alexandra P Braun11,6,12,7, Lauren E Levy11,6,12, Prerna Bhargava7,8, Matthew J Szucs7, Dustin A Ammendolia11,12, Melanie A MacMullan7, Xiaolei Yin11,13,6,12, Travis K Hughes13,6,7,8,9, Marc H Wadsworth6,7,8,9, Rushdy Ahmad7, Seth Rakoff-Nahoum10, Steven A Carr7, Robert Langer13,6,14, James J Collins13,7,8,15,16,17,18, Alex K Shalek13,6,7,8,9,19, Jeffrey M Karp20,21,22,23.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Single-cell genomic methods now provide unprecedented resolution for characterizing the component cell types and states of tissues such as the epithelial subsets of the gastrointestinal tract. Nevertheless, functional studies of these subsets at scale require faithful in vitro models of identified in vivo biology. While intestinal organoids have been invaluable in providing mechanistic insights in vitro, the extent to which organoid-derived cell types recapitulate their in vivo counterparts remains formally untested, with no systematic approach for improving model fidelity.Entities:
Keywords: Chemical biology; Differentiation; Intestinal organoid; Intestinal stem cell; Paneth cell; Single-cell RNA-seq; Stem cell-derived models; Systems biology
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29871632 PMCID: PMC5989470 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-018-0527-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Transcriptional benchmarking of in vitro Paneth cells (PCs) to in vivo. a Schematic of intestinal epithelial cell isolation from terminal ileum for unbiased identification of in vivo PC signature genes, and system for intestinal stem cell (ISC) enrichment to characterize in vitro PCs, via high-throughput scRNA-seq. b Marker gene overlay for binned count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of Lyz1, a canonical PC marker gene, on a tSNE (t-stochastic neighbor embedding) plot of 7667 small intestinal epithelial cells isolated from the terminal ileum; receiver operating characteristic (ROC)-test area under the curve (AUC) = 0.995, n = 2 mice, independent experiments (Additional file 1: Table S1). c Violin plot for the count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of Lyz1 across clusters identified through shared nearest neighbor (SNN) analysis (see Methods) over small intestinal epithelial cells; n = 196 cells in cluster 11, 7667 cells in total. d A tSNE plot of 2513 cells, with clusters identified through SNN (Additional file 1: Table S1 for full gene lists with ROC-test AUC > 0.60) from conventional ENR organoids; n = 6 wells of ENR organoids. e Marker gene overlay for binned count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of Lyz1 on a tSNE plot from; ROC-test AUC = 0.856. f Violin plot of expression contribution to a cell’s transcriptome of PC genes across ENR organoid clusters from (d) (In vivo PC gene list AUC > 0.65, Additional file 1: Table S1); effect size 0.721, ENR-4 vs. all ENR, *t test p < 2.2 × 10−16. g Row-normalized heatmap of top differentially expressed genes using bimodal test over single-cells from the top 200 PC-like cells from ENR-4 and the 196 in vivo PCs (cluster 11, from (c)); *bimodal test, all displayed genes p < 1.89 × 10−16 or less with Bonferroni correction. h Violin plots for the count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of Lyz1, Ang4, and Defa3 in ENR and in vivo PCs; *bimodal test, all p < 2.92 × 10−37 or less with Bonferroni correction. i Violin plot of expression contribution to a cell’s transcriptome of PC genes (effect size 1.25, InVivo vs. ENR, *t test p < 2.2 × 10−16), Wnt pathway (effect size 0.559, InVivo vs. ENR, *t test p < 2.035 × 10−8) and Notch pathway (effect size −0.500, InVivo vs. ENR, *t test p < 5.25 × 10−7) genes (see Additional file 2: Table S2 for gene lists)
Fig. 2Establishing chemically induced Paneth cell (PC)-enriched cultures. a Schematic of small molecule-driven differentiation of LGR5+ ISCs (C - CHIR99021, D - DAPT) and non-specific differentiation. b mRNA expression of PC (Lyz1, Defa1, Mmp7) and ISC (Lgr5) markers relative to ENR, for ENR+CV and ENR + CD at 2 (D2), 4 (D4), and 6 days (D6) (n = 3 biological replicates; two-way ANOVA with multiple comparison test vs. ENR; ** adj. p < 0.01, *** adj. p < 0.001). c Representative confocal imaging of whole cell clusters for PC antimicrobials following 6 days in ENR+CD versus ENR and ENR+CV: stained for anti-DEFA, anti-LYZ and counterstained with DAPI and for actin (phalloidin). d High-resolution fluorescent imaging of in vivo and in vitro single cells from 6-day culture in ENR + CD shows similar morphology and antimicrobial expression: stained for DEFA and LYZ, and counterstained with DAPI and for actin (phalloidin). e Viable cell populations from ENR, ENR+CD, and ENR+CV precursor culture have distinct populations based on CD24 and LYZ content, indicative of PC maturity (n = 3 biological replicates; ENR + CV, days 4, 6, 12, n = 2 biological replicates day 8). f Volcano plot of differentially regulated proteins between 6-day (6D) ENR + CD and ENR cells shows clear enrichment in secreted and PC-associated proteins (labeled). Cut-offs are 2 standard deviations outside the mean expression level of the set and FDR < 0.05. g Rank-order log fold change of detected PC antimicrobial proteins and between 6-day ENR + CD and ENR cultures (n = 4). h Rank-order log fold change of detected secretory proteins associated with EEC and goblet lineages in ENR + CD relative to ENR cultures (n = 4)
Fig. 3Single-cell RNA-sequencing reveals cellular composition across treatments and origins of proteomic data. a A tSNE plot of single cells derived from ENR + CV (n = 985 cells), ENR (n = 2544 cells), and ENR + CD (n = 2382 cells) harvested at day 6 of differentiation, colored by treatment; n = 6 wells for each condition. b Marker gene overlays (on plot from (a)) for binned count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of individual genes of interest. c A tSNE plot, with clusters identified through SNN graph-based clustering (see Additional file 1: Table S1 for marker gene lists), highlighting distinct cell states within each organoid; opacity of density clouds correspond to the Paneth cell score of ENR-4, ENR + CD-3, and ENR + CD-4 clusters (see Fig. 4b). d Violin plot of expression contribution to a cell’s transcriptome of ENR + CD proteome-enriched genes across organoid clusters from (c) (see Additional file 1: Table S1 for full gene list); effect size 2.40 ENR + CD-4 vs. all cells, p < 2.2 × 10−16. e Frequency of each cluster observed within each organoid condition as a fraction of the total cells in each condition
Fig. 4Transcriptional identity of chemically induced Paneth cells (CI-PCs) within conditions and related to in vivo PCs. a Violin plots for the count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of selected genes across called clusters, colors correspond to clusters in Fig. 4c; *t test, p < 6.80 × 10−74 or less with Bonferroni correction, for Lyz1, Defa24, Defa3, and Mmp7 ENR + CD-4 relative to ENR-4. b Violin plot of expression contribution to a cell’s transcriptome of in vivo PC and enteroendocrine marker-cell genes (see Additional file 1: Table S1 for full gene list, AUC > 0.65); effect size 2.52 ENR + CD-4 vs. ENR-4, p < 2.2 × 10−16 for PC score; effect size 0.0465, p = 0.2339 ENR + CD-4 vs. ENR-4 for enteroendocrine cell score. c Row-clustered heatmap of z-scores (−2.5 to 2.5; purple to yellow) for defining genes (n = 69 with AUC > 0.65 of in vivo PCs, see Additional file 1: Table S1 for full gene list) across top 200 cells for PC score (Fig. 5b) from ENR-4 and ENR + CD-4 conditions compared to two biological replicates of in vivo PCs from the terminal ileum (n = 196 cells)
Fig. 5Chemically induced Paneth cells (CI-PCs) are functional in response to host and microbial stimuli. a Supernatant LYZ from 24-h basal and 10 μm CCh-stimulated LYZ cells at varying number of days in ENR + CD culture (top). DNA content from matched samples (bottom) (n = 8 well replicates; SEM error bars too small to visualize). b Supernatant LYZ from 6-day ENR + CD collected basally and following 10 μm CCh stimulation for 0.5, 2, 4, 6, and 24 h (top). DNA content from matched samples basally and following 10 μm CCh stimulation (bottom) (n = 8 well replicates). c 24-h basal (non-stimulated) and 10 μm CCh-stimulated LYZ secretion in 6-day ENR + CD versus ENR and ENR + CV (n = 8 well replicates; two-way ANOVA with multiple comparison test; ns non-significant, * adj. p < 0.05, **** adj. p < 0.0001). d 4-h co-culture of freshly passaged 6-day ENR and ENR + CD cells and select gram-negative and gram-positive aerobic bacteria (n = 13 well replicates; two-way ANOVA with multiple comparison test, * adj. p < 0.05, *** adj. p < 0.001, **** adj. p < 0.0001). e Normalized cellular viability, caspase activity per viable cell, and cytotoxicity per viable cell from 24-h and 48-h ENR and ENR + CD co-cultures at specified mixing ratios (n = 9 well replicates from three biological donors; one sample t test,* p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, **** p < 0.0001)
Fig. 6CI-PCs reveal putative function of Nupr1 transcription factor in Paneth cell (PC) survival. a ENR + CD is enriched for in vivo PC and EEC transcription factors, including Nupr1 (n = 4). b Violin plots for the count-based expression level (log(scaled UMI + 1)) of Nupr1 across in vivo and in vitro called clusters. c Nupr1 inhibition with trifluorperazine (TFP) treatment concurrent with 6-day ENR + CD differentiation reveals dose-dependent toxicity, with preference to PCs (CD24+ and LYZ+) and PC-like (CD24+ and LYZ+) populations as assessed by flow cytometry (n = 3 biological replicates). d 2-day TFP treatment following 6-day ENR + CD differentiation reveals dose-dependent toxicity, with preference to PCs (CD24+ and LYZ+) and PC-like (CD24+ and LYZ+) populations as assessed by flow cytometry (n = 5 biological replicates)