An integrated single-nucleus and spatial transcriptomics atlas reveals the molecular landscape of the human hippocampus

Author:

Nelson Erik D.ORCID,Tippani MadhaviORCID,Ramnauth Anthony D.ORCID,Divecha Heena R.ORCID,Miller Ryan A.ORCID,Eagles Nicholas J.ORCID,Pattie Elizabeth A.ORCID,Kwon Sang HoORCID,Bach Svitlana V.ORCID,Kaipa Uma M.ORCID,Yao JianingORCID,Kleinman Joel E.ORCID,Collado-Torres LeonardoORCID,Han ShizhongORCID,Maynard Kristen R.ORCID,Hyde Thomas M.ORCID,Martinowich KeriORCID,Page Stephanie C.ORCID,Hicks Stephanie C.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe hippocampus contains many unique cell types, which serve the structure’s specialized functions, including learning, memory and cognition. These cells have distinct spatial topography, morphology, physiology, and connectivity, highlighting the need for transcriptome-wide profiling strategies that retain cytoarchitectural organization. Here, we generated spatially-resolved transcriptomics (SRT) and single-nucleus RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) data from adjacent tissue sections of the anterior human hippocampus across ten adult neurotypical donors. We defined molecular profiles for hippocampal cell types and spatial domains. Using non-negative matrix factorization and transfer learning, we integrated these data to define gene expression patterns within the snRNA-seq data and infer the expression of these patterns in the SRT data. With this approach, we leveraged existing rodent datasets that feature information on circuit connectivity and neural activity induction to make predictions about axonal projection targets and likelihood of ensemble recruitment in spatially-defined cellular populations of the human hippocampus. Finally, we integrated genome-wide association studies with transcriptomic data to identify enrichment of genetic components for neurodevelopmental, neuropsychiatric, and neurodegenerative disorders across cell types, spatial domains, and gene expression patterns of the human hippocampus. To make this comprehensive molecular atlas accessible to the scientific community, both raw and processed data are freely available, including through interactive web applications.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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