MAGAN: Aligning Biological Manifolds
This addresses data integration challenges in single-cell biology, offering an incremental improvement over existing GAN approaches for manifold alignment.
The paper tackles the problem of aligning manifolds from different biological measurements to integrate data, presenting MAGAN, a GAN-based method that improves alignment of single-cell RNA-sequencing and mass cytometry data, showing enhanced correlations compared to other models.
It is increasingly common in many types of natural and physical systems (especially biological systems) to have different types of measurements performed on the same underlying system. In such settings, it is important to align the manifolds arising from each measurement in order to integrate such data and gain an improved picture of the system. We tackle this problem using generative adversarial networks (GANs). Recently, GANs have been utilized to try to find correspondences between sets of samples. However, these GANs are not explicitly designed for proper alignment of manifolds. We present a new GAN called the Manifold-Aligning GAN (MAGAN) that aligns two manifolds such that related points in each measurement space are aligned together. We demonstrate applications of MAGAN in single-cell biology in integrating two different measurement types together. In our demonstrated examples, cells from the same tissue are measured with both genomic (single-cell RNA-sequencing) and proteomic (mass cytometry) technologies. We show that the MAGAN successfully aligns them such that known correlations between measured markers are improved compared to other recently proposed models.