HCA Data Explorer

A proximal-to-distal survey of healthy adult human small intestine and colon epithelium by single-cell transcriptomics

Access Granted
Updated September 15, 2022

Background and Aims: Single-cell transcriptomics offer unprecedented resolution of tissue function at the cellular level, yet studies analyzing healthy adult human small intestine and colon are sparse. Here, we present single-cell transcriptomics covering the duodenum, jejunum, ileum, and ascending, transverse, and descending colon from 3 humans. Methods: 12,590 single epithelial cells from three independently processed organ donors were evaluated for organ-specific lineage biomarkers, differentially regulated genes, receptors, and drug targets. Analyses focused on intrinsic cell properties and capacity for response to extrinsic signals along the gut axis across different humans. Results: Cells were assigned to 25 epithelial lineage clusters. Human intestinal stem cells (ISCs) are not specifically marked by many murine ISC markers. Lysozyme expression is not unique to human Paneth cells (PCs), and PCs lack expression of expected niche-factors. BEST4+ cells express NPY and show maturational differences between SI and colon. Tuft cells possess a broad ability to interact with the innate and adaptive immune systems through previously unreported receptors. Some classes of mucins, hormones, cell-junction, and nutrient absorption genes show unappreciated regional expression differences across lineages. Differential expression of receptors and drug targets across lineages reveals biological variation and potential for variegated responses. Conclusions: Our study identifies novel lineage marker genes; covers regional differences; shows important differences between mouse and human gut epithelium; and reveals insight into how the epithelium responds to the environment and drugs. This comprehensive cell atlas of the healthy adult human intestinal epithelium resolves likely functional differences across anatomical regions along the gastrointestinal tract and advances our understanding of human intestinal physiology. Overall design: Single cell RNA sequencing libraries from epithelium isolated from Duodenum, Jejunum, Ileum, Ascending Colon, Transverse Colon, and Descending Colon from each of 3 human organ donors were compiled

Joseph BurclaffUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hilljoseph.burclaff@med.unc.edu
Scott T MagnessUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hillmagness@med.unc.edu
Joseph Burclaff1
R Jarrett Bliton1
Keith A Breau1
Meryem T Ok1
Ismael Gomez-Martinez1
Jolene S Ranek1
Aadra P Bhatt1
Jeremy E Purvis1
John T Woosley1
Scott T Magness (Principal Investigator)1
1University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Rachel Schwartz

To reference this project, please use the following link:

https://explore.data.humancellatlas.org/projects/73769e0a-5fcd-41f4-9083-41ae08bfa4c1
None
INSDC Project Accessions:GEO Series Accessions:INSDC Study Accessions:

Atlas

None

Analysis Portals

CZ CELLxGENECZ CELLxGENE
UCSC Cell BrowserUCSC Cell Browser

Project Label

humanIntestinalEpitheliumAtlas

Species

Homo sapiens

Sample Type

specimens

Anatomical Entity

2 anatomical entities

Organ Part

6 organ parts

Selected Cell Types

2 cell types

Disease Status (Specimen)

normal

Disease Status (Donor)

normal

Development Stage

human adult stage

Library Construction Method

10x 3' v3

Nucleic Acid Source

single cell

Paired End

false

Analysis Protocol

analysis_protocol_1, analysis_protocol_2

File Format

5 file formats

Cell Count Estimate

12.6k

Donor Count

3
fastq.gz72 file(s)h53 file(s)h5ad1 file(s)txt.gz1 file(s)xlsx1 file(s)