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Integrating spatially-resolved transcriptomics (SRT) across biological samples is essential for understanding dynamic changes in tissue architecture and cell-cell interactions . While tools exist for multisample single-cell RNA-seq, methods tailored to multisample SRT remain limited. Here, we introduce Popari, a probabilistic graphical model for factor-based decomposition of multisample SRT that captures condition-specific changes in spatial organization. Popari jointly learns spatial metagenes - linear gene expression programs - and their spatial affinities across samples. Its key innovations include a differential prior to regularize spatial accordance and spatial downsampling to enable multiresolution, hierarchical analysis. Simulations show Popari outperforms existing methods on multisample and multi-resolution spatial metrics. Applications to real datasets uncover spatial metagene dynamics, spatial accordance, and cell identities. In mouse brain (STARmap PLUS), Popari identifies spatial metagenes linked to AD; in thymus (Slide-TCR-seq), it captures increasing colocalization of V(D)J recombination and T cell proliferation; and in ovarian cancer (CosMx), it reveals sample-specific malignant-immune interactions. Overall, Popari provides a general, interpretable framework for analyzing variation in multisample SRT.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.05.08.652741 | DOI Listing |
bioRxiv
May 2025
Ray and Stephanie Lane Computational Biology Department, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Integrating spatially-resolved transcriptomics (SRT) across biological samples is essential for understanding dynamic changes in tissue architecture and cell-cell interactions . While tools exist for multisample single-cell RNA-seq, methods tailored to multisample SRT remain limited. Here, we introduce Popari, a probabilistic graphical model for factor-based decomposition of multisample SRT that captures condition-specific changes in spatial organization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrief Bioinform
September 2024
Department of Mathematical Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, 800 W Campbell Rd, Richardson, TX 75080, United States.
The field of spatially resolved transcriptomics (SRT) has greatly advanced our understanding of cellular microenvironments by integrating spatial information with molecular data collected from multiple tissue sections or individuals. However, methods for multi-sample spatial clustering are lacking, and existing methods primarily rely on molecular information alone. This paper introduces BayeSMART, a Bayesian statistical method designed to identify spatial domains across multiple samples.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrief Funct Genomics
March 2024
School of Public Health, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, Shaanxi 710061, P.R. China.
Differential expression (DE) analysis is a necessary step in the analysis of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and spatially resolved transcriptomics (SRT) data. Unlike traditional bulk RNA-seq, DE analysis for scRNA-seq or SRT data has unique characteristics that may contribute to the difficulty of detecting DE genes. However, the plethora of DE tools that work with various assumptions makes it difficult to choose an appropriate one.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinform Adv
February 2023
Centre for Quantitative Medicine Health Services & Systems Research, Duke-NUS Medical School, 169857 Singapore, Singapore.
Summary: Emerging spatially resolved transcriptomics (SRT) technologies are powerful in measuring gene expression profiles while retaining tissue spatial localization information and typically provide data from multiple tissue sections. We have previously developed the tool SC.MEB-an empirical Bayes approach for SRT data analysis using a hidden Markov random field.
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