Distinct microbial and immune niches of the human colon
Gastrointestinal microbiota and immune cells interact closely and display regional specificity, but little is known about how these communities differ with location. Here, we simultaneously assess microbiota and single immune cells across the healthy, adult human colon, with paired characterisation of immune cells in the mesenteric lymph nodes, to delineate colonic immune niches at steady-state. We describe distinct T helper 1 cell activation and migration profiles along the colon and characterise the transcriptional adaptation trajectory of T regulatory cells between lymphoid tissue and colon. Finally, we show increasing B cell accumulation, clonal expansion and mutational frequency from caecum to sigmoid colon, and link this to the increasing number of reactive bacterial species
To reference this project, please use the following link:
Supplementary links are provided by contributors and represent items such as additional data which can’t be hosted here; code that was used to analyze this data; or tools and visualizations associated with this specific dataset.
Downloaded and exported data is governed by the HCA Data Release Policy and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0). For more information please see our Data Use Agreement.
Atlas
Analysis Portals
Project Label
ColonImmune10XSS2VDJSpecies
Homo sapiens
Sample Type
specimens
Anatomical Entity
Organ Part
Selected Cell Types
Disease Status (Specimen)
normal
Disease Status (Donor)
normal
Development Stage
human adult stage
Library Construction Method
Nucleic Acid Source
single cell
Paired End
false, trueAnalysis Protocol
MultiSampleSmartSeq2_v2.2.6, SmartSeq2SingleSample_v5.1.5, optimus_post_processing_v1.0.0, optimus_v4.2.2File Format
Cell Count Estimate
1.5kDonor Count
6