Xenium Human GBM Image Courtesy of Simon Gregory
The relationship between cells and their organization within tissue is critical to understanding the context in which cells function in their microenvironment. The advent of spatial expression profiling is facilitating the characterization of cell-cell and cell neighborhoods during critical phases of development and disease. The MGC is pleased to offer two spatial profiling solutions that can profile RNA and proteins at near- or single cell resolution. As of September 2023, the MGC has run over 400 Visium samples across a diverse group of tissue types.
Spatial profiling of RNA: The 10xGenomics Visium Spatial Gene Expression Solution incorporates unbiased, high-throughput total mRNA analysis for intact tissue sections with morphological context, offering a previously inaccessible view of tissue biology. Preserving spatial context while identifying distinct groups of cells offers critical information to understand the relationship of cellular function, phenotype, and location in tissue microenvironments.
Human lung tissue granuloma on Visium 11mm2 – courtesy, Drs. David Tobin and Charlie Pyle
Visium fresh frozen: Fresh-frozen tissue samples are sectioned and placed in either two or four capture areas on the Visium Spatial Gene Expression slide. Using standard fixation and Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) staining tissue sections are first visualized on slides. The tissue is then permeabilized to release mRNA from the cells with mRNA binding with spatially-barcoded oligonucleotides present on the spots. A reverse transcription reaction produces cDNA from captured mRNA. The second strand of cDNA is then synthesized and denatured. The barcoded cDNA is then pooled for downstream processing and library preparation to complete a sequencing-ready library. The Visium Spatial Gene Expression library is sequenced using standard short-read sequencers, and data is processed and visualized using 10x Genomics software: Space Ranger Analysis Pipelines and Loupe Browser, and third party applications.
Visium fixed tissue: The 10xGenomics Visium Spatial Gene Expression for FFPE solution has been specifically designed to accommodate fragmented target RNA that occurs during the fixing and embedding process. The spatial FFPE solution uses a panel of 18,000 paired 25mer probes that are ligated on the target RNA and contain an oligo sequence that is captured by the poly-A primers on the surface of the Visium slide (as above). This new capability will enable investigators to profile archival banked FFPE samples to spatially resolve RNA expression in human or mouse FFPE tissue.
Spatial profiling of proteins: While spatial profiling of RNA within cells provides an incredible snapshot into a cells activity at the time of tissue excision, cannon in the field dictates that changes in RNA expression do not always equate to change in protein expression. Further, the field of molecular biology has relied on canonical protein markers that do not always equate to characteristic RNA markers. To address these gaps in our understanding the MGC is pleased to announce the implementation of the Akoya Phenocyler.
Akoya Phenocycler: the Phenocycler allows for profiling of panels of up to 100 proteins at true single cell resolution. The protocol uses a one-time staining of tissue with barcoded antibodies and cyclical hybridization of fluorescent reporter molecules whose images are captured across the tissue using our Zeiss microscope. Data are analyzed using third party software to carryout differential expression, cell-cell, and cell-neighborhood analyses.
Introducing Xenium: a leading-edge spatial transcriptomics technology that allows investigators to visualize transcripts at subcellular resolution in the spatial context (10.45x22.45mm) in fresh frozen or FFPE tissue sections. Where Visium is geared towards discovery, Xenium is focused on targeted panels and allows for subcellular resolution. Xenium in situ analyses employs circularizable probes specific to target transcripts that are constructed to bind florescent reporters detectable by the Xenium Analyzer. Onboard the Analyzer, microscope images of the tissue reveal the location of each fluorescently tagged probe. The probes are removed and new probes are bound in a cyclical imaging scheme, creating a unique optical signature for each target over the course of a run. The Xenium assay allows an investigator to visualize up to 300 targets per run and will soon be expanding capabilities for upwards of 1000. Curated panels for human breast, human brain, human lung, mouse brain, mouse tissue atlassing, and human multi-tissue & cancer are currently available, alongside 10x Genomics’ standalone custom panels. More advanced analysis tools are coming soon, including next-generation segmentation. As of September 2023, the MGC has run over 100 Xenium samples, using a variety of panels.
For more information, visit 10xGenomics.com