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GenePT

News

March 2024: We've uploaded new GenePT embeddings with 1. additional protein information and 2. newer text embedding models at DOI.

What is GenePT?

GenePT is a single-cell foundation model (that is, a model trained on broad data enabling it to be applied across a wide range of downstream tasks) that leverages ChatGPT embeddings to address gene-level and cell-level biology tasks. This project is inspired by the significant recent progress in using large-scale gene expression data (e.g., tens of millions of cells) to develop foundation models for single-cell biology.

Existing models indirectly learn gene and cellular functions from gene expression profiles, often requiring extensive data curation and resource-intensive training. In contrast, GenePT offers a complementary approach by using NCBI text descriptions of individual genes combined with GPT-3.5 to generate gene embeddings. GenePT then produces single-cell embeddings in two ways: (i) by averaging the gene embeddings, weighted by each gene’s expression level; or (ii) by creating a sentence embedding for each cell, using gene names ordered by expression level.

Without the need for dataset curation and additional pre-training, GenePT is efficient and user-friendly. In many downstream tasks used to evaluate recent single-cell foundation models—such as classifying gene properties and cell types—GenePT achieves comparable, and often superior, performance to existing single-cell foundation models. GenePT demonstrates that using large language model embeddings of literature is a straightforward and effective approach for developing biological foundation models.

How do I use GenePT?

The analysis scripts used to generate GenePT data and to reproduce the analysis in the paper can be found in the repository (with details for each script in the Breakdown of analysis files section below).

We also provide the following list of readily available datasets that might be useful for a broader range of applications:

  1. Extracted summary texts scraped from the NCBI page for each gene.
  2. Pre-computed OpenAI embeddings (text-embedding-ada-002 and text-embedding-3-large) for the corresponding gene summaries.

These data are deposited at DOI. .

Tutorials and Use

We provide example notebooks to run the following analyses:

  1. Gene-level prediction tasks
  2. Gene-gene interaction analysis analysis
  3. Cell-level biological data annotation
  4. Batch effect removal (Cardiomyocyte dataset; Aorta dataset)

Please file an issue if you have a request for a tutorial that is not currently included.

Citation

If you use GenePT for your analysis, please cite our manuscript:

Chen YT, Zou J. (2023+) GenePT: A Simple But Effective Foundation Model for Genes and Cells Built From ChatGPT. bioRxiv preprint: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.10.16.562533v2.

Breakdown of analysis files:

  1. request_ncbi_text_for_genes.ipynb provides example code to download NCBI gene summary page.
  2. gene_embeddings_examples.ipynb provides example code to embed the extracted descriptions in 1 using GPT-3.5 embeddings. Note that this requires a valid registration of the OpenAI API (see instructions and pricing details at https://openai.com/blog/openai-api).
  3. gene_level_task_table_1.ipynb reproduces the gene level tasks for GenePT embeddings in Table 1 of the paper.
  4. gene_level_task_figure_2.ipynb provides the necessary data and output for the gene level tasks described in Figure 2 of our paper.
  5. aorta_data_analysis.ipynb provides example code to create your foundation-model cell embeddings in <20 lines of code and demonstrates the batch effect removal + biology preservation (Figure 4 results of the paper).

Datasets used in GenePT

  1. For the gene-level tasks, we make use of the following datasets:
  2. For the cell-level tasks, we make use of the following datasets:
    • hPancreas, Myeloid, and Multiple Sclerosis (processed and distributed by Cui et al. (2023+))
      • Multiple Sclerosis (M.S.) dataset: link.
      • Myeloid (Mye.) dataset: link.
      • hPancreas dataset: link.
    • Cardiomyocyte dataset:
      • Original data can be downloaded here.
      • We created a random 10% subset of the original dataset for our cell-level analysis, available at this google drive folder.
    • Aorta dataset:
      • Original data has been deposited here, and we used the additional cell type annotation provided by the authors on GitHub.
      • We created a 20% random subset of the original dataset (link).
  3. The initial list of genes are curated from vocab.json (provided by scGPT authors) and token_dictionary.pkl.

References:

  1. Chaffin, M. et al. Single-nucleus profiling of human dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Nature 608, 174–180 (2022).
  2. Chen YT, Zou J. (2023+) GenePT: A Simple But Hard-to-Beat Foundation Model for Genes and Cells Built From ChatGPT. bioRxiv preprint: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.10.16.562533v1.
  3. Cui, H., et al. (2023). scGPT: Towards building a foundation model for single-cell multi-omics using generative AI. bioRxiv, 2023-04.
  4. Li, Y. et al. Single-cell transcriptome analysis reveals dynamic cell populations and differential gene expression patterns in control and aneurysmal human aortic tissue. Circulation 142, 1374–1388 (2020).