Neuronal ambient RNA contamination causes misinterpreted and masked cell types in brain single-nuclei datasets

Emre Caglayan, Yuxiang Liu, Genevieve Konopka

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Scopus citations

Abstract

Ambient RNA contamination in single-cell and single-nuclei RNA sequencing (snRNA-seq) is a significant problem, but its consequences are poorly understood. Here, we show that ambient RNAs in brain snRNA-seq datasets have a nuclear or non-nuclear origin with distinct gene set signatures. Both ambient RNA signatures are predominantly neuronal, and we find that some previously annotated neuronal cell types are distinguished by ambient RNA contamination. We detect pervasive neuronal ambient RNA contamination in all glial cell types unless glia and neurons are physically separated prior to sequencing. We demonstrate that this contamination can be removed in silico and show that previous single-nuclei RNA-seq-based annotations of immature oligodendrocytes are glial nuclei contaminated with ambient RNAs. After ambient RNA removal, we detect rare, committed oligodendrocyte progenitor cells not annotated in most previous adult human brain datasets. Together, these results provide an in-depth analysis of ambient RNA contamination in brain single-nuclei datasets.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)4043-4056.e5
JournalNeuron
Volume110
Issue number24
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 21 2022

Keywords

  • ambient RNA
  • neurogenomics
  • oligodendrocytes
  • single-cell RNA-seq

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Neuroscience

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