Abstract

Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals gene expression differences between individual cells and also identifies different cell populations that are present in the bulk starting material. To obtain an accurate assessment of patient samples, single-cell suspensions need to be generated as soon as possible once the tissue or sample has been collected. However, this requirement poses logistical challenges for experimental designs involving multiple samples from the same subject since these samples would ideally be processed at the same time to minimize technical variation in data analysis. Although cryopreservation has been shown to largely preserve the transcriptome, it is unclear whether the freeze-thaw process might alter gene expression profiles in a cell-type specific manner or whether changes in cell-type proportions might also occur. To address these questions in the context of multiple myeloma clinical studies, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to compare fresh and frozen cells isolated from bone marrow aspirates of six multiple myeloma patients, analyzing both myeloma cells (CD138+) and cells constituting the microenvironment (CD138−). We found that cryopreservation using 90% fetal calf serum and 10% dimethyl sulfoxide resulted in highly consistent gene expression profiles when comparing fresh and frozen samples from the same patient for both CD138+ myeloma cells (R ≥ 0.96) and for CD138– cells (R ≥ 0.9). We also demonstrate that CD138– cell-type proportions showed minimal alterations, which were mainly related to small differences in immune cell subtype sensitivity to the freeze-thaw procedures. Therefore, when processing fresh multiple myeloma samples is not feasible, cryopreservation is a useful option in single-cell profiling studies.

Highlights

  • Single-cell RNA sequencing allows transcriptome analysis at the single-cell level and has rapidly become one of the most popular techniques in biomedical research (Lafzi et al, 2018)

  • Myeloma tumor cells were defined by expression of the plasma cell marker CD138 (CD138+), while CD138-negative (CD138−) cells defined the myeloma cell microenvironment, which is composed of osteoblasts and osteoclasts, as well as stromal, endothelial, and immune cells

  • We evaluated the impact of cryopreservation on both multiple myeloma cells isolated from bone marrow aspirates and their microenvironment using scRNA-seq

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Summary

Introduction

Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) allows transcriptome analysis at the single-cell level and has rapidly become one of the most popular techniques in biomedical research (Lafzi et al, 2018) This high-throughput technology makes it possible to measure cell-type specific gene expression in tens of thousands of cells in a single experiment (Chen et al, 2018). If celltype specific gene expression differences are to be compared in samples collected from the same subject, these samples ideally would be processed at the same time to minimize experimental batch effects (Alles et al, 2017). In such scenarios a more feasible solution would be to cryopreserve single-cell suspensions of freshly isolated samples for future analysis (Alles et al, 2017; Guillaumet-Adkins et al, 2017; Attar et al, 2018; Hentze et al, 2019)

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