Graph Structure Learning for Tumor Microenvironment with Cell Type Annotation from non-spatial scRNA-seq data
This work addresses a domain-specific problem for cancer researchers by enhancing cell type prediction and interaction analysis in tumor microenvironments, representing a strong specific gain over existing methods.
The study tackled the problem of inaccurate cell type annotation and cell-cell communication inference in the tumor microenvironment from non-spatial scRNA-seq data by developing a novel graph neural network model, achieving an average accuracy of 84.83% and other improved metrics across multiple cancer datasets.
The exploration of cellular heterogeneity within the tumor microenvironment (TME) via single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) is essential for understanding cancer progression and response to therapy. Current scRNA-seq approaches, however, lack spatial context and rely on incomplete datasets of ligand-receptor interactions (LRIs), limiting accurate cell type annotation and cell-cell communication (CCC) inference. This study addresses these challenges using a novel graph neural network (GNN) model that enhances cell type prediction and cell interaction analysis. Our study utilized a dataset consisting of 49,020 cells from 19 patients across three cancer types: Leukemia, Breast Invasive Carcinoma, and Colorectal Cancer. The proposed scGSL model demonstrated robust performance, achieving an average accuracy of 84.83%, precision of 86.23%, recall of 81.51%, and an F1 score of 80.92% across all datasets. These metrics represent a significant enhancement over existing methods, which typically exhibit lower performance metrics. Additionally, by reviewing existing literature on gene interactions within the TME, the scGSL model proves to robustly identify biologically meaningful gene interactions in an unsupervised manner, validated by significant expression differences in key gene pairs across various cancers. The source code and data used in this paper can be found in https://github.com/LiYuechao1998/scGSL.