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FAST: Scalable Factor Analysis for Spatial Dimension Reduction of Multi-section Spatial Transcriptomics.

Wei Liu1, Xiao Zhang2, Xiaoran Chai3

  • 1School of Mathematics, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610065, China.

Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics
|January 25, 2026
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Researchers developed FAST, a novel spatial dimension reduction method for analyzing large spatially resolved transcriptomics datasets. This efficient tool accurately captures biological signals and spatial relationships, outperforming existing methods in speed and scalability.

Keywords:
Generalized factor analysisIntegrationMulti-section analysisSpatial dimension reductionSpatially resolved transcriptomics

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Area of Science:

  • Genomics
  • Computational Biology
  • Bioinformatics

Background:

  • Spatially resolved transcriptomics (SRT) techniques are rapidly advancing, generating large-scale datasets.
  • Existing spatial dimension reduction methods struggle with the throughput and scale of modern SRT data.
  • Efficient and scalable methods are needed to analyze multi-section SRT data while preserving biological and spatial information.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a fast and scalable method for spatial dimension reduction of large-scale SRT data.
  • To create a generalized probabilistic factor analysis model that accounts for the count-based nature of SRT data.
  • To enable the analysis of multiple tissue sections simultaneously while preserving spatial smoothness.

Main Methods:

  • Developed FAST (Fast and Efficient Generalized Probabilistic Factor Analysis), a spatially aware dimension reduction model.
  • FAST models count data across multiple sections and incorporates local spatial dependencies.
  • Employs scalable computational complexity for handling large datasets.

Main Results:

  • FAST embeddings showed improved correlation with annotated cell and domain types in simulated and real datasets.
  • FAST successfully analyzed a large mouse embryo Stereo-seq dataset (>2.3 million locations) in 2 hours.
  • Identified differential immune transcription factor activity and predicted CCNH as a carcinogenesis factor in a breast cancer Xenium dataset.

Conclusions:

  • FAST is an efficient and scalable method for spatial dimension reduction of large-scale SRT data.
  • The model accurately preserves biological signals and spatial information across multiple tissue sections.
  • FAST enables novel biological discoveries by analyzing complex datasets and identifying regulatory relationships.