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Award ID contains: 2042159

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  1. Abstract MotivationSpatial transcriptomics technologies, which generate a spatial map of gene activity, can deepen the understanding of tissue architecture and its molecular underpinnings in health and disease. However, the high cost makes these technologies difficult to use in practice. Histological images co-registered with targeted tissues are more affordable and routinely generated in many research and clinical studies. Hence, predicting spatial gene expression from the morphological clues embedded in tissue histological images provides a scalable alternative approach to decoding tissue complexity. ResultsHere, we present a graph neural network based framework to predict the spatial expression of highly expressed genes from tissue histological images. Extensive experiments on two separate breast cancer data cohorts demonstrate that our method improves the prediction performance compared to the state-of-the-art, and that our model can be used to better delineate spatial domains of biological interest. Availability and implementationhttps://github.com/song0309/asGNN/ 
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  2. Abstract  Spatial transcripome (ST) profiling can reveal cells’ structural organizations and functional roles in tissues. However, deciphering the spatial context of gene expressions in ST data is a challenge—the high-order structure hiding in whole transcriptome space over 2D/3D spatial coordinates requires modeling and detection of interpretable high-order elements and components for further functional analysis and interpretation. This paper presents a new method GraphTucker—graph-regularized Tucker tensor decomposition for learning high-order factorization in ST data. GraphTucker is based on a nonnegative Tucker decomposition algorithm regularized by a high-order graph that captures spatial relation among spots and functional relation among genes. In the experiments on several Visium and Stereo-seq datasets, the novelty and advantage of modeling multiway multilinear relationships among the components in Tucker decomposition are demonstrated as opposed to the Canonical Polyadic Decomposition and conventional matrix factorization models by evaluation of detecting spatial components of gene modules, clustering spatial coefficients for tissue segmentation and imputing complete spatial transcriptomes. The results of visualization show strong evidence that GraphTucker detect more interpretable spatial components in the context of the spatial domains in the tissues. Availability and implementationhttps://github.com/kuanglab/GraphTucker. 
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  3. Abstract Spatially-resolved RNA profiling has now been widely used to understand cells’ structural organizations and functional roles in tissues, yet it is challenging to reconstruct the whole spatial transcriptomes due to various inherent technical limitations in tissue section preparation and RNA capture and fixation in the application of the spatial RNA profiling technologies. Here, we introduce a graph-guided neural tensor decomposition (GNTD) model for reconstructing whole spatial transcriptomes in tissues. GNTD employs a hierarchical tensor structure and formulation to explicitly model the high-order spatial gene expression data with a hierarchical nonlinear decomposition in a three-layer neural network, enhanced by spatial relations among the capture spots and gene functional relations for accurate reconstruction from highly sparse spatial profiling data. Extensive experiments on 22 Visium spatial transcriptomics datasets and 3 high-resolution Stereo-seq datasets as well as simulation data demonstrate that GNTD consistently improves the imputation accuracy in cross-validations driven by nonlinear tensor decomposition and incorporation of spatial and functional information, and confirm that the imputed spatial transcriptomes provide a more complete gene expression landscape for downstream analyses of cell/spot clustering for tissue segmentation, and spatial gene expression clustering and visualizations. 
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  4. SUMMARY As sessile organisms, plants are finely tuned to respond dynamically to developmental, circadian and environmental cues. Genome‐wide studies investigating these types of cues have uncovered the intrinsically different ways they can impact gene expression over time. Recent advances in single‐cell sequencing and time‐based bioinformatic algorithms are now beginning to reveal the dynamics of these time‐based responses within individual cells and plant tissues. Here, we review what these techniques have revealed about the spatiotemporal nature of gene regulation, paying particular attention to the three distinct ways in which plant tissues are time sensitive. (i) First, we discuss how studying plant cell identity can reveal developmental trajectories hidden in pseudotime. (ii) Next, we present evidence that indicates that plant cell types keep their own local time through tissue‐specific regulation of the circadian clock. (iii) Finally, we review what determines the speed of environmental signaling responses, and how they can be contingent on developmental and circadian time. By these means, this review sheds light on how these different scales of time‐based responses can act with tissue and cell‐type specificity to elicit changes in whole plant systems. 
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  5. Abstract Background Non-invasive reporter systems are powerful tools to query physiological and transcriptional responses in organisms. For example, fluorescent and bioluminescent reporters have revolutionized cellular and organismal assays and have been used to study plant responses to abiotic and biotic stressors. Integrated, cooled charge-coupled device (CCD) camera systems have been developed to image bioluminescent and fluorescent signals in a variety of organisms; however, these integrated long-term imaging systems are expensive. Results We have developed self-assembled systems for both growing and monitoring plant fluorescence and bioluminescence for long-term experiments under controlled environmental conditions. This system combines environmental growth chambers with high-sensitivity CCD cameras, multi-wavelength LEDs, open-source software, and several options for coordinating lights with imaging. This easy-to-assemble system can be used for short and long-term imaging of bioluminescent reporters, acute light-response, circadian rhythms, delayed fluorescence, and fluorescent-protein-based assays in vivo. Conclusions We have developed two self-assembled imaging systems that will be useful to researchers interested in continuously monitoring in vivo reporter systems in various plant species. 
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  6. Martelli, Pier Luigi (Ed.)
    Abstract Motivation Clustering spatial-resolved gene expression is an essential analysis to reveal gene activities in the underlying morphological context by their functional roles. However, conventional clustering analysis does not consider gene expression co-localizations in tissue for detecting spatial expression patterns or functional relationships among the genes for biological interpretation in the spatial context. In this article, we present a convolutional neural network (CNN) regularized by the graph of protein–protein interaction (PPI) network to cluster spatially resolved gene expression. This method improves the coherence of spatial patterns and provides biological interpretation of the gene clusters in the spatial context by exploiting the spatial localization by convolution and gene functional relationships by graph-Laplacian regularization. Results In this study, we tested clustering the spatially variable genes or all expressed genes in the transcriptome in 22 Visium spatial transcriptomics datasets of different tissue sections publicly available from 10× Genomics and spatialLIBD. The results demonstrate that the PPI-regularized CNN constantly detects gene clusters with coherent spatial patterns and significantly enriched by gene functions with the state-of-the-art performance. Additional case studies on mouse kidney tissue and human breast cancer tissue suggest that the PPI-regularized CNN also detects spatially co-expressed genes to define the corresponding morphological context in the tissue with valuable insights. Availability and implementation Source code is available at https://github.com/kuanglab/CNN-PReg. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online. 
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