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Cell type evolution reconstruction across species through cell phylogenies of single-cell RNA sequencing data.

Jasmine L MahCasey W Dunn
Published in: Nature ecology & evolution (2024)
The origin and evolution of cell types has emerged as a key topic in evolutionary biology. Driven by rapidly accumulating single-cell datasets, recent attempts to infer cell type evolution have largely been limited to pairwise comparisons because we lack approaches to build cell phylogenies using model-based approaches. Here we approach the challenges of applying explicit phylogenetic methods to single-cell data by using principal components as phylogenetic characters. We infer a cell phylogeny from a large, comparative single-cell dataset of eye cells from five distantly related mammals. Robust cell type clades enable us to provide a phylogenetic, rather than phenetic, definition of cell type, allowing us to forgo marker genes and phylogenetically classify cells by topology. We further observe evolutionary relationships between diverse vessel endothelia and identify the myelinating and non-myelinating Schwann cells as sister cell types. Finally, we examine principal component loadings and describe the gene expression dynamics underlying the function and identity of cell type clades that have been conserved across the five species. A cell phylogeny provides a rigorous framework towards investigating the evolutionary history of cells and will be critical to interpret comparative single-cell datasets that aim to ask fundamental evolutionary questions.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • rna seq
  • high throughput
  • gene expression
  • cell therapy
  • induced apoptosis
  • genome wide
  • stem cells
  • cell cycle arrest
  • cell death
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • transcription factor
  • deep learning
  • big data