Journal article

A practical guide to single-cell RNA-sequencing for biomedical research and clinical applications

A Haque, J Engel, SA Teichmann, T Lönnberg

Genome Medicine | BIOMED CENTRAL LTD | Published : 2017

Abstract

RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) is a genomic approach for the detection and quantitative analysis of messenger RNA molecules in a biological sample and is useful for studying cellular responses. RNA-seq has fueled much discovery and innovation in medicine over recent years. For practical reasons, the technique is usually conducted on samples comprising thousands to millions of cells. However, this has hindered direct assessment of the fundamental unit of biology-the cell. Since the first single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) study was published in 2009, many more have been conducted, mostly by specialist laboratories with unique skills in wet-lab single-cell genomics, bioinformatics, and computati..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre for Emerging Infectious Diseases


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Project grants (numbers 1028641 and 1126399) and Career Development Fellowship (number 1028643), University of Queensland, Australian Infectious Disease Research Centre grants, by European Research Council grant ThSWITCH (number 260507), and the Lister Institute for Preventative Medicine.