Ángeles Arzalluz Luque
In the world of transcriptomics, the emergence of single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) ignited a revolution in our understanding of cellular diversity, unraveling novel mechanisms in tissue heterogeneity, development and disease. However, when this thesis began, using scRNA-seq to understand Alternative Splicing (AS) was a challenging frontier due the inherent limitations of the technology. In spite of this research gap, pertinent questions persisted regarding cell-level AS patterns, particularly concerning the recapitulation of isoform diversity observed in bulk RNA-seq data at the cellular level and the roles played by cell and cell type-specific isoforms.
The work conducted in the present thesis aims to harness the potential of scRNA-seq for alternative isoform analysis, outlining technical and analytical challenges and designing computational methods to overcome them. To achieve this, we established a roadmap with three main aims. First, we set requirements for studying isoforms using scRNA-seq and conducted an extensive review of existing research, interrogating whether these requirements were met. Combining this acquired knowledge with several computational simulations allowed us to delineate the strengths and pitfalls of available data generation methods and computational tools. During the second research stage, this insight was used to design a suitable data processing pipeline, in which we jointly employed bulk long-read and short-read scRNA-seq sequenced from full-length cDNAs to ensure adequate isoform reconstruction as well as sensitive cell-level isoform quantification. Additionally, we refined available transcriptome curation strategies, introducing them as innovative modules in the transcriptome quality control software SQANTI3. Lastly, we harnessed single-cell isoform expression data and the rich biological diversity inherent in scRNA-seq, encompassing various cell types, in the design of a novel isoform co-expression analysis method. Percentile correlations effectively mitigated single-cell noise, unveiling clusters of co-expressed isoforms and exposing a layer of regulation in cellular identity that operated independently of gene expression. We additionally introduced co-Differential Isoform Usage (coDIU) analysis, enhancing our ability to interpret isoform cluster networks. This endeavour, combined with the computational annotation of functional sites and domains in the long read-defined isoform models, unearthed a distinctive functional signature in coDIU genes. This research effort materialized in the release of acorde, an R package that encapsulates all analyses functionalities developed throughout this thesis, providing a reproducible means for the scientific community to further explore the depths of alternative isoform biology within single-cell transcriptomics.
This thesis describes a complex journey aimed at unlocking the potential of scRNA-seq data for investigating AS and isoforms: from a landscape marked by the scarcity of tools and guidelines, towards the development of novel analysis solutions and the acquisition of valuable biological insight. In a swiftly evolving field, our methodological contributions constitute a significant leap forward in the application of scRNA-seq to the study of alternative isoform expression, providing innovative resources for delving deeper into the intricacies of post-transcriptional regulation and cellular function through the lens of single-cell transcriptomics.
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