Generation and analysis of context-specific genome-scale metabolic models derived from single-cell RNA-Seq data

Author:

Gustafsson Johan12ORCID,Anton Mihail3ORCID,Roshanzamir Fariba1,Jörnsten Rebecka4,Kerkhoven Eduard J.1ORCID,Robinson Jonathan L.15ORCID,Nielsen Jens125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden

2. Wallenberg Center for Protein Research, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden

3. Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, National Bioinformatics Infrastructure Sweden, Science for Life Laboratory, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-41258 Gothenburg, Sweden

4. Mathematical Sciences, University of Gothenburg and Chalmers University of Technology, SE-412 96 Gothenburg, Sweden

5. BioInnovation Institute, DK-2200 Copenhagen, Denmark

Abstract

Single-cell RNA sequencing combined with genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) has the potential to unravel the differences in metabolism across both cell types and cell states but requires new computational methods. Here, we present a method for generating cell-type-specific genome-scale models from clusters of single-cell RNA-Seq profiles. Specifically, we developed a method to estimate the minimum number of cells required to pool to obtain stable models, a bootstrapping strategy for estimating statistical inference, and a faster version of the task-driven integrative network inference for tissues algorithm for generating context-specific GEMs. In addition, we evaluated the effect of different RNA-Seq normalization methods on model topology and differences in models generated from single-cell and bulk RNA-Seq data. We applied our methods on data from mouse cortex neurons and cells from the tumor microenvironment of lung cancer and in both cases found that almost every cell subtype had a unique metabolic profile. In addition, our approach was able to detect cancer-associated metabolic differences between cancer cells and healthy cells, showcasing its utility. We also contextualized models from 202 single-cell clusters across 19 human organs using data from Human Protein Atlas and made these available in the web portal Metabolic Atlas, thereby providing a valuable resource to the scientific community. With the ever-increasing availability of single-cell RNA-Seq datasets and continuously improved GEMs, their combination holds promise to become an important approach in the study of human metabolism.

Funder

Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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