The Human Lung Cell Atlas: A High-Resolution Reference Map of the Human Lung in Health and Disease
Author(s)
Regev, Aviv
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Lung disease accounts for every sixth death globally. Profiling the molecular state of all lung cell types in health and disease is currently revolutionizing the identification of disease mechanisms and will aid the design of novel diagnostic and personalized therapeutic regimens. Recent progress in high-throughput techniques for single-cell genomic and transcriptomic analyses has opened up new possibilities to study individual cells within a tissue, classify these into cell types, and characterize variations in their molecular profiles as a function of genetics, environment, cell-cell interactions, developmental processes, aging, or disease. Integration of these cell state definitions with spatial information allows the in-depth molecular description of cellular neighborhoods and tissue microenvironments, including the tissue resident structural and immune cells, the tissue matrix, and the microbiome. The Human Cell Atlas consortium aims to characterize all cells in the healthy human body and has prioritized lung tissue as one of the flagship projects. Here, we present the rationale, the approach, and the expected impact of a Human Lung Cell Atlas.
Date issued
2019-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology; Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MITJournal
American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
Citation
Schiller, Herbert B. et al. “The Human Lung Cell Atlas: A High-Resolution Reference Map of the Human Lung in Health and Disease.” American journal of respiratory cell and molecular biology 61 (2019): 31-41 © 2019 The Author(s)
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1044-1549
1535-4989
Keywords
Clinical Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Molecular Biology, Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine