DNA-GPS: A theoretical framework for optics-free spatial genomics and synthesis of current methods
Oct 18, 2023·
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0 min read
Laura Greenstreet
Anton Afanassiev
Yusuke Kijima
Matthieu Heitz
Soh Ishiguro
Samuel King
Nozomu Yachie
Geoffrey Schiebinger
Abstract
While single-cell sequencing technologies provide unprecedented insights into genomic profiles at the cellular level, they lose the spatial context of cells. Over the past decade, diverse spatial transcriptomics and multi-omics technologies have been developed to analyze molecular profiles of tissues. In this article, we categorize current spatial genomics technologies into three classes - optical imaging, positional indexing, and mathematical cartography. We discuss trade-offs in resolution and scale, identify limitations, and highlight synergies between existing single-cell and spatial genomics methods. Further, we propose DNA-GPS (global positioning system), a theoretical framework for large-scale optics-free spatial genomics that combines ideas from mathematical cartography and positional indexing. DNA-GPS has the potential to achieve scalable spatial genomics for multiple measurement modalities, and by eliminating the need for optical measurement, it has the potential to position cells in three-dimensions (3D).
Type
Publication
In Cell Systems

Authors
Anton Afanassiev
(he/him)
PhD Candidate at UBC
I am a PhD candidate in mathematics working in computational biology. Over the past few years I have been developing
algorithms to massively scale data collection and analysis for scRNA-seq. My ideal job has me tackling unique problems
in computational biology on large datasets.