RZiMM-scRNA: A regularized zero-inflated mixture model framework for single-cell RNA-seq data

25 Oct 2021  ·  Xinlei Mi, William Bekerman, Peter A. Sims, Peter D. Canoll, Jianhua Hu ·

Applications of single-cell RNA sequencing in various biomedical research areas have been blooming. This new technology provides unprecedented opportunities to study disease heterogeneity at the cellular level. However, unique characteristics of scRNA-seq data, including large dimensionality, high dropout rates, and possibly batch effects, bring great difficulty into the analysis of such data. Not appropriately addressing these issues obstructs true scientific discovery. Herein, we propose a unified Regularized Zero-inflated Mixture Model framework designed for scRNA-seq data (RZiMM-scRNA) to simultaneously detect cell subgroups and identify gene differential expression based on a developed importance score, accounting for both dropouts and batch effects. We conduct extensive simulation studies in which we evaluate the performance of RZiMM-scRNA and compare it with several popular methods, including Seurat, SC3, K-Means, and Hierarchical Clustering. Simulation results show that RZiMM-scRNA demonstrates superior clustering performance and enhanced biomarker detection accuracy compared to alternative methods, especially when cell subgroups are less distinct, verifying the robustness of our method. Our empirical investigations focus on two brain tumor studies dealing with astrocytoma of various grades, including the most malignant of all brain tumors, glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Our goal is to delineate cell heterogeneity and identify driving biomarkers associated with these tumors. Notably, RZiMM-scNRA successfully identifies a small group of oligodendrocyte cells which has drawn much attention in biomedical literature on brain cancers.

PDF Abstract
No code implementations yet. Submit your code now

Datasets


  Add Datasets introduced or used in this paper

Results from the Paper


  Submit results from this paper to get state-of-the-art GitHub badges and help the community compare results to other papers.

Methods