A single-cell immune atlas of primary and secondary lymphoid organs in pigs

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Abstract

Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) has revolutionized understandings of cellular identities and functions due to the ability to study transcriptome-wide gene expression within individual cells. Multi-tissue scRNA-seq atlases have generated holistic understandings of body-wide cell dynamics and serve as key foundational resources for further scientific studies across a variety of species. Pigs are a valuable biomedical model, and pork is an essential global food source, but minimal understanding of immune cell identities and functions across anatomical locations limits agricultural and health advancements in pigs. To address current limitations, we apply scRNA-seq to create an atlas of immune cells recovered from key immune tissues including primary lymphoid organs (bone marrow and thymus) and secondary lymphoid organs (lymph node and spleen). Thymus data was compared to a previously published scRNA-seq dataset of pig thymus and shared a general consensus while also identifying several new thymic cell populations. Comparison of spleen to a human splenic scRNA-seq dataset also revealed conserved features, including two subsets of innate lymphoid cells conserved between pigs and humans. Spatial reconstruction of lymph node structure from scRNA-seq data revealed follicular organization with similar cell type distributions and cell signaling interactions to those in human lymph nodes. To expand accessibility of the scRNA-seq atlas for biological query, we deploy an interactive application and demonstrate its use for non-computational exploration of diverse cell populations recovered from bone marrow. Overall, results expand current foundational understandings of immune cell identities and functions in pig lymphoid organs and demonstrate pig-to-human immune similarities to consider for future research applications. Materials associated with this work are made readily accessible for others to investigate individual queries requiring foundational knowledge pertaining to pig immunity.

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