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Nature Publishing Group, Clinical and Translational Immunology, 7(10), 2021

DOI: 10.1002/cti2.1308

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No evidence that plasmablasts transdifferentiate into developing neutrophils in severe COVID‐19 disease

Journal article published in 2021 by José Alquicira‐Hernandez ORCID, Joseph E. Powell ORCID, Tri Giang Phan ORCID
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesA recent single‐cell RNA sequencing study by Wilk et al. suggested that plasmablasts can transdifferentiate into ‘developing neutrophils’ in patients with severe COVID‐19 disease. We explore the evidence for this.MethodsWe downloaded the original data and code used by the authors in their study to replicate their findings and explore the possibility that regressing out variables may have led the authors to overfit their data.ResultsThe lineage relationship between plasmablasts and developing neutrophils breaks down when key features are not regressed out, and the data are not overfitted during the analysis.ConclusionPlasmablasts do not transdifferentiate into developing neutrophils. The single‐cell RNA sequencing is a powerful technique for biological discovery and hypothesis generation. However, caution should be exercised in the bioinformatic analysis and interpretation of the data and findings cross‐validated by orthogonal techniques.