A beginner's guide to analyzing and visualizing mass cytometry data

AK Kimball, LM Oko, BL Bullock… - The Journal of …, 2018 - journals.aai.org
AK Kimball, LM Oko, BL Bullock, RA Nemenoff, LF van Dyk, ET Clambey
The Journal of Immunology, 2018journals.aai.org
Mass cytometry has revolutionized the study of cellular and phenotypic diversity, significantly
expanding the number of phenotypic and functional characteristics that can be measured at
the single-cell level. This high-dimensional analysis platform has necessitated the
development of new data analysis approaches. Many of these algorithms circumvent
traditional approaches used in flow cytometric analysis, fundamentally changing the way
these data are analyzed and interpreted. For the beginner, however, the large number of …
Abstract
Mass cytometry has revolutionized the study of cellular and phenotypic diversity, significantly expanding the number of phenotypic and functional characteristics that can be measured at the single-cell level. This high-dimensional analysis platform has necessitated the development of new data analysis approaches. Many of these algorithms circumvent traditional approaches used in flow cytometric analysis, fundamentally changing the way these data are analyzed and interpreted. For the beginner, however, the large number of algorithms that have been developed, as well as the lack of consensus on best practices for analyzing these data, raise multiple questions: Which algorithm is the best for analyzing a dataset? How do different algorithms compare? How can one move beyond data visualization to gain new biological insights? In this article, we describe our experiences as recent adopters of mass cytometry. By analyzing a single dataset using five cytometry by time-of-flight analysis platforms (viSNE, SPADE, X-shift, PhenoGraph, and Citrus), we identify important considerations and challenges that users should be aware of when using these different methods and common and unique insights that can be revealed by these different methods. By providing annotated workflow and figures, these analyses present a practical guide for investigators analyzing high-dimensional datasets. In total, these analyses emphasize the benefits of integrating multiple cytometry by time-of-flight analysis algorithms to gain complementary insights into these high-dimensional datasets.
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