Current Issues in Molecular Biology (Oct 2021)

Effects of Sample Size on Plant Single-Cell RNA Profiling

  • Hongyu Chen,
  • Yang Lv,
  • Xinxin Yin,
  • Xi Chen,
  • Qinjie Chu,
  • Qian-Hao Zhu,
  • Longjiang Fan,
  • Longbiao Guo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cimb43030119
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43, no. 3
pp. 1685 – 1697

Abstract

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Single-cell RNA (scRNA) profiling or scRNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) makes it possible to parallelly investigate diverse molecular features of multiple types of cells in a given plant tissue and discover cell developmental processes. In this study, we evaluated the effects of sample size (i.e., cell number) on the outcome of single-cell transcriptome analysis by sampling different numbers of cells from a pool of ~57,000 Arabidopsis thaliana root cells integrated from five published studies. Our results indicated that the most significant principal components could be achieved when 20,000–30,000 cells were sampled, a relatively high reliability of cell clustering could be achieved by using ~20,000 cells with little further improvement by using more cells, 96% of the differentially expressed genes could be successfully identified with no more than 20,000 cells, and a relatively stable pseudotime could be estimated in the subsample with 5000 cells. Finally, our results provide a general guide for optimizing sample size to be used in plant scRNA-seq studies.

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