Comparative Analysis of Single-Cell RNA Sequencing Methods with and without Sample Multiplexing

Int J Mol Sci. 2024 Mar 29;25(7):3828. doi: 10.3390/ijms25073828.

Abstract

Single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) has emerged as a powerful technique for investigating biological heterogeneity at the single-cell level in human systems and model organisms. Recent advances in scRNA-seq have enabled the pooling of cells from multiple samples into single libraries, thereby increasing sample throughput while reducing technical batch effects, library preparation time, and the overall cost. However, a comparative analysis of scRNA-seq methods with and without sample multiplexing is lacking. In this study, we benchmarked methods from two representative platforms: Parse Biosciences (Parse; with sample multiplexing) and 10x Genomics (10x; without sample multiplexing). By using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) obtained from two healthy individuals, we demonstrate that demultiplexed scRNA-seq data obtained from Parse showed similar cell type frequencies compared to 10x data where samples were not multiplexed. Despite relatively lower cell capture affecting library preparation, Parse can detect rare cell types (e.g., plasmablasts and dendritic cells) which is likely due to its relatively higher sensitivity in gene detection. Moreover, a comparative analysis of transcript quantification between the two platforms revealed platform-specific distributions of gene length and GC content. These results offer guidance for researchers in designing high-throughput scRNA-seq studies.

Keywords: 10x; PBMC; SPLiT-seq; multiplexing; single-cell RNA sequencing.

MeSH terms

  • Benchmarking*
  • Gene Library
  • Genomics
  • Humans
  • Leukocytes, Mononuclear*
  • Sequence Analysis, RNA

Grants and funding

A.H.L.L acknowledges funding from the NMRC Clinician Scientist Award (MOH-000335-00); S.A. acknowledges funding from the NMRC (NMRC/OFLCG/002/2018, CIRG19may0052), MOH-STaR19nov-0002, A*STAR PEC21-H22P0M0003, Duke-NUS and SingHealth AMC core funding. S.A. acknowledges funding from the Singapore Ministry of Health’s NMRC under its Centre Grant Program (MOH-000988); E.P. acknowledges funding from the Ministry of Education - Singapore (T2EP30221-0013); E.P. and J.B. acknowledge funding from National Research Foundation Singapore (OFLCG22may-0011) and Duke-NUS Medical School.