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Hierarchical Modeling for Rare Event Detection and Cell Subset Alignment across Flow Cytometry Samples

Overview of attention for article published in PLoS Computational Biology, July 2013
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Title
Hierarchical Modeling for Rare Event Detection and Cell Subset Alignment across Flow Cytometry Samples
Published in
PLoS Computational Biology, July 2013
DOI 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003130
Pubmed ID
Authors

Andrew Cron, Cécile Gouttefangeas, Jacob Frelinger, Lin Lin, Satwinder K. Singh, Cedrik M. Britten, Marij J. P. Welters, Sjoerd H. van der Burg, Mike West, Cliburn Chan

Abstract

Flow cytometry is the prototypical assay for multi-parameter single cell analysis, and is essential in vaccine and biomarker research for the enumeration of antigen-specific lymphocytes that are often found in extremely low frequencies (0.1% or less). Standard analysis of flow cytometry data relies on visual identification of cell subsets by experts, a process that is subjective and often difficult to reproduce. An alternative and more objective approach is the use of statistical models to identify cell subsets of interest in an automated fashion. Two specific challenges for automated analysis are to detect extremely low frequency event subsets without biasing the estimate by pre-processing enrichment, and the ability to align cell subsets across multiple data samples for comparative analysis. In this manuscript, we develop hierarchical modeling extensions to the Dirichlet Process Gaussian Mixture Model (DPGMM) approach we have previously described for cell subset identification, and show that the hierarchical DPGMM (HDPGMM) naturally generates an aligned data model that captures both commonalities and variations across multiple samples. HDPGMM also increases the sensitivity to extremely low frequency events by sharing information across multiple samples analyzed simultaneously. We validate the accuracy and reproducibility of HDPGMM estimates of antigen-specific T cells on clinically relevant reference peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) samples with known frequencies of antigen-specific T cells. These cell samples take advantage of retrovirally TCR-transduced T cells spiked into autologous PBMC samples to give a defined number of antigen-specific T cells detectable by HLA-peptide multimer binding. We provide open source software that can take advantage of both multiple processors and GPU-acceleration to perform the numerically-demanding computations. We show that hierarchical modeling is a useful probabilistic approach that can provide a consistent labeling of cell subsets and increase the sensitivity of rare event detection in the context of quantifying antigen-specific immune responses.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
Canada 3 3%
United States 2 2%
France 1 1%
Germany 1 1%
United Kingdom 1 1%
Switzerland 1 1%
Unknown 77 90%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 27 31%
Researcher 23 27%
Student > Master 7 8%
Professor > Associate Professor 5 6%
Student > Bachelor 4 5%
Other 10 12%
Unknown 10 12%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 16 19%
Computer Science 14 16%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 9 10%
Mathematics 8 9%
Medicine and Dentistry 8 9%
Other 17 20%
Unknown 14 16%