SoupX removes ambient RNA contamination from droplet based single-cell RNA sequencing data
Abstract
Background
Droplet based single-cell RNA sequence analyses assume all acquired RNAs are endogenous to cells. However, any cell free RNAs contained within the input solution are also captured by these assays. This sequencing of cell free RNA constitutes a background contamination that confounds the biological interpretation of single-cell transcriptomic data.
Results
We demonstrate that contamination from this ‘soup’ of cell free RNAs is ubiquitous, with experiment-specific variations in composition and magnitude. We present a method, SoupX, for quantifying the extent of the contamination and estimating ‘background corrected’ cell expression profiles that seamlessly integrate with existing downstream analysis tools. Applying this method to several datasets using multiple droplet sequencing technologies, we demonstrate that its application improves biological interpretation of otherwise misleading data, as well as improving quality control metrics.
Conclusions
We present ‘SoupX’, a tool for removing ambient RNA contamination from droplet based single cell RNA sequencing experiments. This tool has broad applicability and its application can improve the biological utility of existing and future data sets.
Key Points
The signal from droplet based single cell RNA sequencing is ubiquitously contaminated by capture of ambient mRNA.
SoupX is a method to quantify the abundance of these ambient mRNAs and remove them.
Correcting for ambient mRNA contamination improves biological interpretation.
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