Organization of the human intestine at single-cell resolution

Author:

Hickey John W.ORCID,Becker Winston R.ORCID,Nevins Stephanie A.,Horning Aaron,Perez Almudena Espin,Zhu ChenchenORCID,Zhu Bokai,Wei Bei,Chiu Roxanne,Chen Derek C.ORCID,Cotter Daniel L.ORCID,Esplin Edward D.,Weimer Annika K.ORCID,Caraccio ChiaraORCID,Venkataraaman Vishal,Schürch Christian M.ORCID,Black Sarah,Brbić MariaORCID,Cao Kaidi,Chen Shuxiao,Zhang WeiruoORCID,Monte Emma,Zhang Nancy R.ORCID,Ma ZongmingORCID,Leskovec Jure,Zhang ZhengyanORCID,Lin Shin,Longacre Teri,Plevritis Sylvia K.,Lin YiingORCID,Nolan Garry P.ORCID,Greenleaf William J.ORCID,Snyder MichaelORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe intestine is a complex organ that promotes digestion, extracts nutrients, participates in immune surveillance, maintains critical symbiotic relationships with microbiota and affects overall health1. The intesting has a length of over nine metres, along which there are differences in structure and function2. The localization of individual cell types, cell type development trajectories and detailed cell transcriptional programs probably drive these differences in function. Here, to better understand these differences, we evaluated the organization of single cells using multiplexed imaging and single-nucleus RNA and open chromatin assays across eight different intestinal sites from nine donors. Through systematic analyses, we find cell compositions that differ substantially across regions of the intestine and demonstrate the complexity of epithelial subtypes, and find that the same cell types are organized into distinct neighbourhoods and communities, highlighting distinct immunological niches that are present in the intestine. We also map gene regulatory differences in these cells that are suggestive of a regulatory differentiation cascade, and associate intestinal disease heritability with specific cell types. These results describe the complexity of the cell composition, regulation and organization for this organ, and serve as an important reference map for understanding human biology and disease.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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