scHumanNet: a single-cell network analysis platform for the study of cell-type specificity of disease genes

Author:

Cha Junha1,Yu Jiwon1,Cho Jae-Won2,Hemberg Martin2ORCID,Lee Insuk13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biotechnology, College of Life Science and Biotechnology, Yonsei University , Seoul 03722 , Republic of Korea

2. Evergrande Center for Immunologic Disease, Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women's Hospital , Boston , MA , USA

3. POSTECH Biotech Center, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) , Pohang 37673 , Republic of Korea

Abstract

Abstract A major challenge in single-cell biology is identifying cell-type-specific gene functions, which may substantially improve precision medicine. Differential expression analysis of genes is a popular, yet insufficient approach, and complementary methods that associate function with cell type are required. Here, we describe scHumanNet (https://github.com/netbiolab/scHumanNet), a single-cell network analysis platform for resolving cellular heterogeneity across gene functions in humans. Based on cell-type-specific gene networks (CGNs) constructed under the guidance of the HumanNet reference interactome, scHumanNet displayed higher functional relevance to the cellular context than CGNs built by other methods on single-cell transcriptome data. Cellular deconvolution of gene signatures based on network compactness across cell types revealed breast cancer prognostic markers associated with T cells. scHumanNet could also prioritize genes associated with particular cell types using CGN centrality and identified the differential hubness of CGNs between disease and healthy conditions. We demonstrated the usefulness of scHumanNet by uncovering T-cell-specific functional effects of GITR, a prognostic gene for breast cancer, and functional defects in autism spectrum disorder genes specific for inhibitory neurons. These results suggest that scHumanNet will advance our understanding of cell-type specificity across human disease genes.

Funder

Ministry of Health & Welfare, Republic of Korea

Evergrande Center and the Helmsley Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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