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Unique and shared transcriptomic signatures underlying localized scleroderma pathogenesis identified using interpretable machine learning
Aaron BI Rosen, Anwesha Sanyal, Theresa Hutchins, Giffin Werner, Jacob S. Berkowitz, Tracy Tabib, Robert Lafyatis, Heidi Jacobe, Jishnu Das, Kathryn S. Torok
Aaron BI Rosen, Anwesha Sanyal, Theresa Hutchins, Giffin Werner, Jacob S. Berkowitz, Tracy Tabib, Robert Lafyatis, Heidi Jacobe, Jishnu Das, Kathryn S. Torok
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Research Article Immunology

Unique and shared transcriptomic signatures underlying localized scleroderma pathogenesis identified using interpretable machine learning

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Abstract

Using transcriptomic profiling at single-cell resolution, we investigated cell-intrinsic and cell-extrinsic signatures associated with pathogenesis and inflammation-driven fibrosis in both adult and pediatric patients with localized scleroderma (LS). We performed single-cell RNA-Seq on adult and pediatric patients with LS and healthy controls. We then analyzed the single-cell RNA-Seq data using an interpretable factor analysis machine learning framework, significant latent factor interaction discovery and exploration (SLIDE), which moves beyond predictive biomarkers to infer latent factors underlying LS pathophysiology. SLIDE is a recently developed latent factor regression-based framework that comes with rigorous statistical guarantees regarding identifiability of the latent factors, corresponding inference, and FDR control. We found distinct differences in the characteristics and complexity in the molecular signatures between adult and pediatric LS. SLIDE identified cell type–specific determinants of LS associated with age and severity and revealed insights into signaling mechanisms shared between LS and systemic sclerosis (SSc), as well as differences in onset of the disease in the pediatric compared with adult population. Our analyses recapitulate known drivers of LS pathology and identify cellular signaling modules that stratify LS subtypes and define a shared signaling axis with SSc.

Authors

Aaron BI Rosen, Anwesha Sanyal, Theresa Hutchins, Giffin Werner, Jacob S. Berkowitz, Tracy Tabib, Robert Lafyatis, Heidi Jacobe, Jishnu Das, Kathryn S. Torok

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Figure 1

scRNA-Seq defines cell populations in the skin of patients with LS compared with age- and sex-matched healthy controls.

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scRNA-Seq defines cell populations in the skin of patients with LS compa...
(A) The 3 major steps of the pipeline are illustrated: tissue collection, dissociation, and library preparation; single-cell transcription; and data analysis. (B) The uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP) of the 122,809 cells derived from the skin of 27 LS samples and 17 healthy samples is displayed, with the final clustering into 15 cell type subclusters. (C) The marker genes specific to each cell cluster that led to the final cellular annotations are displayed. (D) The proportions of LS and healthy that comprise each of the 15 subclusters are illustrated, with overall higher proportions of inflammatory cells (i.e., T cells and B cells) and stromal cells (keratinocytes) in LS.

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