| dc.description.abstract | Background The identification of cell type-specific genes and their modification under different conditions is central
to our understanding of human health and disease. The stomach, a hollow organ in the upper gastrointestinal tract,
provides an acidic environment that contributes to microbial defence and facilitates the activity of secreted digestive
enzymes to process food and nutrients into chyme. In contrast to other sections of the gastrointestinal tract, detailed
descriptions of cell type gene enrichment profiles in the stomach are absent from the major single-cell sequencingbased atlases.<p>
<p>Results Here, we use an integrative correlation analysis method to predict human stomach cell type transcriptome
signatures using unfractionated stomach RNAseq data from 359 individuals. We profile parietal, chief, gastric mucous,
gastric enteroendocrine, mitotic, endothelial, fibroblast, macrophage, neutrophil, T-cell, and plasma cells, identifying
over 1600 cell type-enriched genes.
<p>Conclusions We uncover the cell type expression profile of several non-coding genes strongly associated
with the progression of gastric cancer and, using a sex-based subset analysis, uncover a panel of male-only chief cellenriched genes. This study provides a roadmap to further understand human stomach biology. | en_US |