Abstract

BackgroundSingle-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) has quickly become one of the most dominant techniques in modern transcriptome assessment. In particular, 10X Genomics’ Chromium system, with its high throughput approach, turn key and thorough user guide made this cutting-edge technique accessible to many laboratories using diverse animal models. However, standard pre-processing, including the alignment and cell filtering pipelines might not be ideal for every organism or tissue. Here we applied an alternative strategy, based on the pseudoaligner kallisto, on twenty-two publicly available single cell sequencing datasets from a wide range of tissues of eight organisms and compared the results with the standard 10X Genomics’ Cell Ranger pipeline.ResultsIn most of the tested samples, kallisto produced higher sequencing read alignment rates and total gene detection rates in comparison to Cell Ranger. Although datasets processed with Cell Ranger had higher cell counts, outside of human and mouse datasets, these additional cells were routinely of low quality, containing low gene detection rates. Thorough downstream analysis of one kallisto processed dataset, obtained from the zebrafish pineal gland, revealed clearer clustering, allowing the identification of an additional photoreceptor cell type that previously went undetected. The finding of the new cluster suggests that the photoreceptive pineal gland is essentially a bi-chromatic tissue containing both green and red cone-like photoreceptors and implies that the alignment and pre-processing pipeline can affect the discovery of biologically-relevant cell types.ConclusionWhile Cell Ranger favors higher cell numbers, using kallisto results in datasets with higher median gene detection per cell. We could demonstrate that cell type identification was not hampered by the lower cell count, but in fact improved as a result of the high gene detection rate and the more stringent filtering. Depending on the acquired dataset, it can be beneficial to favor high quality cells and accept a lower cell count, leading to an improved classification of cell types.

Highlights

  • Single-cell RNA sequencing has quickly become one of the most dominant techniques in modern transcriptome assessment

  • Using kallisto we found a strong increase in alignment rates and consequent gene detection rates within most of the tested Chromium v2/v3 datasets

  • Total gene detection rates were increased in the kallisto samples in comparison to Cell Ranger, with the exception of the C. elegans datasets

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Summary

Introduction

Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) has quickly become one of the most dominant techniques in modern transcriptome assessment. We applied an alternative strategy, based on the pseudoaligner kallisto, on twenty-two publicly available single cell sequencing datasets from a wide range of tissues of eight organisms and compared the results with the standard 10X Genomics’ Cell Ranger pipeline. In addition to its hardware, 10X Genomics provides a whole suite of tools called Cell Ranger for processing sequencing reads (demultiplexing, alignment, filtering, dimensionality reduction and visualization of clusters) (10xgenomics.com). Within this package, STAR [11] is applied to align the millions of short reads, typically produced by Illumina sequencers. This aligner has been shown to work accurately and reliably and is widely used

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