4.6 Review

The Trifecta of Single-Cell, Systems-Biology, and Machine-Learning Approaches

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12071098

Keywords

single-cell omics; systems biology; machine learning; single-cell systems biology

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01CA208 517, R01AG056318, R01AG61796, P50CA136393]
  2. Mayo Clinic Center for Biomedical Discovery
  3. Mayo Clinic Center for Individualized Medicine
  4. Mayo Clinic Cancer Center
  5. David F. and Margaret T. Grohne Cancer Immunology and Immunotherapy Program

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Machine learning plays a crucial role in bridging the analytical gaps in single-cell studies and works synergistically with single-cell data. System biology algorithms have integrated machine learning with biological components to provide system-level analyses of single-cell omics data, shedding light on complex biological mechanisms.
Together, single-cell technologies and systems biology have been used to investigate previously unanswerable questions in biomedicine with unparalleled detail. Despite these advances, gaps in analytical capacity remain. Machine learning, which has revolutionized biomedical imaging analysis, drug discovery, and systems biology, is an ideal strategy to fill these gaps in single-cell studies. Machine learning additionally has proven to be remarkably synergistic with single-cell data because it remedies unique challenges while capitalizing on the positive aspects of single-cell data. In this review, we describe how systems-biology algorithms have layered machine learning with biological components to provide systems level analyses of single-cell omics data, thus elucidating complex biological mechanisms. Accordingly, we highlight the trifecta of single-cell, systems-biology, and machine-learning approaches and illustrate how this trifecta can significantly contribute to five key areas of scientific research: cell trajectory and identity, individualized medicine, pharmacology, spatial omics, and multi-omics. Given its success to date, the systems-biology, single-cell omics, and machine-learning trifecta has proven to be a potent combination that will further advance biomedical research.

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