北京大学定量生物学中心
学术报告
题 目: Single-cell proteomic and transcriptomic analysis of macrophage heterogeneity
报告人: Dr. Nikolai Slavov
Allen Distinguished Investigator
Bioengineering Department and Barnett Institute, Northeastern University
时 间: 10月12日(周一)9:00-10:00
地 点: Online (Zoom会议)
会议 ID:627 9242 4126
https://zoom.com.cn/j/62792424126
主持人: Lucas Carey
摘 要:
The
fate and physiology of individual cells are controlled by proteins.
Yet, our ability to quantitatively analyze proteins in single cells has
remained limited. To overcome this barrier, we developed SCoPE2. It
substantially increases quantitative accuracy and throughput while
lowering cost and hands-on time by introducing automated and
miniaturized sample preparation. These advances enabled us to analyze
the emergence of cellular heterogeneity as homogeneous monocytes
differentiated into macrophage-like cells in the absence of polarizing
cytokines. SCoPE2 quantified over 2,700 proteins in 1,018 single
monocytes and macrophages in ten days of instrument time, and the
quantified proteins allowed us to discern single cells by cell type.
Furthermore, the data uncovered a continuous gradient of proteome states
for the macrophage-like cells, suggesting that macrophage heterogeneity
may emerge even in the absence of polarizing cytokines. Parallel
measurements of transcripts by 10x Genomics scRNA-seq suggest that
SCoPE2 samples 20-fold more protein copies than RNA copies per gene,
thus supporting quantification with improved count statistics. Joint
analysis of the data suggested the feasibility of inferring
transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation. Our methodology
lays the foundation for automated and quantitative single-cell analysis
of proteins by mass-spectrometry.
报告人简介:
Nikolai
Slavov’s group seeks principles in the coordination among protein
synthesis, metabolism, cell growth and differentiation. The Slavov group
has pioneered high-throughput mass-spectrometry methods for quantifying
proteins in single cells and is developing new computational methods
for analyzing and understanding single-cell proteomics and multimodal
data. The group obtained direct evidence for a new regulatory mechanism
of protein synthesis (ribosome specialization) and continues to drive
research in this emerging field supported by the NIH Director’s New
Innovator Award. Nikolai Slavov studied biology and physics at MIT
before completing a dissertation at Princeton University (Botstein
laboratory) with research focused on the coordination among metabolism,
growth and gene expression. Dr. Slavov then returned to MIT (van
Oudenaarden laboratory) for post-doctoral research that characterized
trade-offs of aerobic glycolysis. Professor Slavov actively organizes
community initiatives, such as the annual single-cell proteomics
conference (single-cell.net/), which is a highly interactive and
interdisciplinary meeting. He also participates and contributes to
organizing other leading conferences, including NeurIPS and HUPO.