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The use of single-cell combinatorial indexing sequencing via droplet microfluidics presents an attractive approach for balancing cost, scalability, robustness and accessibility. However, existing methods often require tailored protocols for individual modalities, limiting their automation potential and clinical applicability. To address this, we introduce UDA-seq, a universal workflow that integrates a post-indexing step to enhance throughput and systematically adapt existing droplet-based single-cell multimodal methods. UDA-seq was benchmarked across various tissue and cell types, enabling several common multimodal analyses, including single-cell co-assay of RNA and VDJ, RNA and chromatin, and RNA and CRISPR perturbation. Notably, UDA-seq facilitated the efficient generation of over 100,000 high-quality single-cell datasets from three dozen frozen clinical biopsy specimens within a single-channel droplet microfluidics experiment. Downstream analysis demonstrated the robustness of this approach in identifying rare cell subpopulations associated with clinical phenotypes and exploring the vulnerability of cancer cells.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12165859 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41592-024-02586-y | DOI Listing |
The use of single-cell combinatorial indexing sequencing via droplet microfluidics presents an attractive approach for balancing cost, scalability, robustness and accessibility. However, existing methods often require tailored protocols for individual modalities, limiting their automation potential and clinical applicability. To address this, we introduce UDA-seq, a universal workflow that integrates a post-indexing step to enhance throughput and systematically adapt existing droplet-based single-cell multimodal methods.
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