Palantir is an algorithm to align cells along differentiation trajectories. Palantir models differentiation as a stochastic process where stem cells differentiate to terminally differentiated cells by a series of steps through a low dimensional phenotypic manifold. Palantir effectively captures the continuity in cell states and the stochasticity in cell fate determination. Palantir has been designed to work with multidimensional single cell data from diverse technologies such as Mass cytometry and single cell RNA-seq.
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Palantir has been implemented in Python3 and can be installed using:
$> pip install PhenoGraph $> pip install palantir
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Palantir depends on a number of
python3
packages available on pypi and these dependencies are listed insetup.py
All the dependencies will be automatically installed using the above commands -
To uninstall:
$> pip uninstall palantir
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If you would like to determine gene expression trends, please install R programming language and the R package GAM . You will also need to install the rpy2 module using
$> pip install rpy2
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Palantir can also be used with Scanpy. It is fully integrated into Scanpy, and can be found under Scanpy's external modules (link)
A tutorial on Palantir usage and results visualization for single cell RNA-seq data can be found in this notebook: http://nbviewer.jupyter.org/github/dpeerlab/Palantir/blob/master/notebooks/Palantir_sample_notebook.ipynb
scanpy anndata
objects are available for download for the three replicates generated in the manuscript: Rep1, Rep2, Rep3
Each object has the following elements
.X
: Filtered, normalized and log transformed count matrix.raw
: Filtered raw count matrix.obsm['MAGIC_imputed_data']
: Imputed count matrix using MAGIC.obsm['tsne']
: tSNE maps presented in the manuscript generated using scaled diffusion components as inputs.obs['clusters']
: Clustering of cells.obs['palantir_pseudotime']
: Palantir pseudo-time ordering.obs['palantir_diff_potential']
: Palantir differentation potential.obsm['palantir_branch_probs']
: Palantir branch probabilities.uns['palantir_branch_probs_cell_types']
: Column names for branch probabilities.uns['ct_colors']
: Cell type colors used in the manuscript.uns['cluster_colors']
: Cluster colors used in the manuscript.varm['mast_diff_res_pval']
: MAST p-values for differentially expression in each cluster compared to others.varm['mast_diff_res_statistic']
: MAST statistic for differentially expression in each cluster compared to others.uns['mast_diff_res_columns']
: Column names for the differential expression results
Notebooks detailing the generation of results comparing Palantir to trajectory detection algorithms are available here
Palantir manuscript is available from Nature Biotechnology. If you use Palantir for your work, please cite our paper.
@article{Palantir_2019,
title = {Characterization of cell fate probabilities in single-cell data with Palantir},
author = {Manu Setty and Vaidotas Kiseliovas and Jacob Levine and Adam Gayoso and Linas Mazutis and Dana Pe'er},
journal = {Nature Biotechnology},
year = {2019},
month = {march},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-019-0068-4},
doi = {10.1038/s41587-019-0068-4}
}
- A fix related to issue#28. When identifying terminal states, duplicate values were generated instead of unique ones.