Entry Date:
December 1, 2020

Cell-to-Cell Variation in Gene Expression

Principal Investigator Salil Garg


Many genes show highly heterogeneous expression across populations of cells, with high expression in some cells and low expression in other cells.

In development, this heterogeneity helps give rise to the diverse cell types in the body. The hypothesis is that this structural feature of cell populations arising in development may be co-opted by cancer to form persister cell states that resist therapy. Gene expression variability has previously been attributed to “noise,” or random variation. Yet, not all genes show variable expression, with many stably expressed across populations. We combine bioinformatic analysis of single cell expression datasets with targeted experimental cell biology to understand what gives rise to gene expression variation at the single cell level. We focus on mouse embryonic stem cells and well characterized cancers to understand what common features drive heterogeneity in these populations.