Fly Cell Atlas: A single-nucleus transcriptomic atlas of the adult fruit fly


Journal article


Hongjie Li, Jasper Janssens, FCA Consortium including Sarah G. Leinwand, et al.
Science, 2022

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Li, H., Janssens, J., including Sarah G. Leinwand, F. C. A. C., & et al. (2022). Fly Cell Atlas: A single-nucleus transcriptomic atlas of the adult fruit fly. Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Li, Hongjie, Jasper Janssens, FCA Consortium including Sarah G. Leinwand, and et al. “Fly Cell Atlas: A Single-Nucleus Transcriptomic Atlas of the Adult Fruit Fly.” Science (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Li, Hongjie, et al. “Fly Cell Atlas: A Single-Nucleus Transcriptomic Atlas of the Adult Fruit Fly.” Science, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{hongjie2022a,
  title = {Fly Cell Atlas: A single-nucleus transcriptomic atlas of the adult fruit fly},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Science},
  author = {Li, Hongjie and Janssens, Jasper and including Sarah G. Leinwand, FCA Consortium and et al.}
}

Abstract

For more than 100 years, the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has been one of the most studied model organisms. Here, we present a single-cell atlas of the adult fly, Tabula Drosophilae, that includes 580,000 nuclei from 15 individually dissected sexed tissues as well as the entire head and body, annotated to >250 distinct cell types. We provide an in-depth analysis of cell type–related gene signatures and transcription factor markers, as well as sexual dimorphism, across the whole animal. Analysis of common cell types between tissues, such as blood and muscle cells, reveals rare cell types and tissue-specific subtypes. This atlas provides a valuable resource for the Drosophila community and serves as a reference to study genetic perturbations and disease models at single-cell resolution. Description Cell type diversity in a whole fly The fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster has served as a premier model organism for discovering fundamental and evolutionarily conserved biological mechanisms. Combining recent advances in single-cell sequencing with powerful fly genetic tools holds great promise for making further discoveries. Li et al. present a single-cell atlas of the entire adult fly that includes 580,000 cells and more than 250 annotated cell types. Cells from the head and body recapitulated cell types from 15 dissected tissues. In-depth analyses revealed rare cell types, cell-type-specific gene signatures, and sexual dimorphism. This atlas provides a resource for the Drosophila community to study genetic perturbations and diseases at single-cell resolution. —BAP A single-nucleus transcriptomic map reveals more than 250 distinct cell types in the entire adult Drosophila melanogaster. INTRODUCTION Drosophila melanogaster has had a fruitful history in biological research because it has contributed to many key discoveries in genetics, development, and neurobiology. The fruit fly genome contains ~14,000 protein-coding genes, ~63% of which have human orthologs. Single-cell RNA-sequencing has recently been applied to multiple Drosophila tissues and developmental stages. However, these data have been generated by different laboratories on different genetic backgrounds with different dissociation protocols and sequencing platforms, which has hindered the systematic comparison of gene expression across cells and tissues. RATIONALE We aimed to establish a cell atlas for the entire adult Drosophila with the same genetic background, dissociation protocol, and sequencing platform to (i) obtain a comprehensive categorization of cell types, (ii) integrate single-cell transcriptome data with existing knowledge about gene expression and cell types, (iii) systematically compare gene expression across the entire organism and between males and females, and (iv) identify cell type–specific markers across the entire organism. We chose single-nucleus RNA-sequencing (snRNA-seq) to circumvent the difficulties of dissociating cells that are embedded in the cuticle (e.g., sensory neurons) or that are multinucleated (e.g., muscle cells). We took two complementary strategies: sequencing nuclei from dissected tissues to know the identity of the tissue source and sequencing nuclei from the entire head and body to ensure that all cells are sampled. Experts from 40 laboratories participated in crowd annotation to assign transcriptomic cell types with the best knowledge available. RESULTS We sequenced 570,000 cells using droplet-based 10x Genomics from 15 dissected tissues as well as whole heads and bodies, separately in females and males. We also sequenced 10,000 cells from dissected tissues using the plate-based Smart-seq2 platform, providing deeper coverage per cell. We developed reproducible analysis pipelines using NextFlow and implemented a distributed cell-type annotation system with controlled vocabularies in SCope. Crowd-based annotations of transcriptomes from dissected tissues identified 17 main cell categories and 251 detailed cell types linked to FlyBase ontologies. Many of these cell types are characterized for the first time, either because they emerged only after increasing cell coverage or because they reside in tissues that had not been previously subjected to scRNA-seq. The excellent correspondence of transcriptomic clusters from whole body and dissected tissues allowed us to transfer annotations and identify a few cuticular cell types not detected in individual tissues. Cross-tissue analysis revealed location-specific subdivisions of muscle cells and heterogeneity within blood cells. We then determined cell type–specific marker genes and transcription factors with different specificity levels, enabling the construction of gene regulatory networks. Finally, we explored sexual dimorphism, finding a link between sex-biased expression and the presence of doublesex, and investigated tissue dynamics through trajectory analyses. CONCLUSION Our Fly Cell Atlas (FCA) constitutes a valuable resource for the Drosophila community as a reference for studies of gene function at single-cell resolution. All the FCA data are freely available for further analysis through multiple portals and can be downloaded for custom analyses using other single-cell tools. The ability to annotate cell types by sequencing the entire head and body will facilitate the use of Drosophila in the study of biological processes and in modeling human diseases at a whole-organism level with cell-type resolution. All data with annotations can be accessed from www.flycellatlas.org, which provides links to SCope, ASAP, and cellxgene portals. Tabula Drosophilae. In this single-cell atlas of the adult fruit fly, 580,000 cells were sequenced and >250 cell types were annotated. They are from 15 individually dissected sexed tissues as well as the entire head and body. All data are freely available for visualization and download, with featured analyses shown at the bottom right.





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