The skin is the largest human organ and a site of substantial disease burden, yet its cellular and molecular organization across the body is largely undefined. Here we construct an organ-wide single-cell spatial atlas of ~1.2 million cells from normal adult human skin, resolving the location of 45 cell types across 114 samples encompassing 15 anatomic sites. We uncover site-specific stereotypic cell-type composition and their organization into ten multicellular neighborhoods, most notably a peri
Single-cell spatial transcriptomic analysis of human skin anatomy
P. Restrepo·Andrew L. Ji·Aubrey Houser·Harkirat Singh Sandhu·Angie V. Ramirez·M. Grace Hren·Raman Gill·Abiha Kazmi·Larry Chen·Alexandra Nigro·Ichiro Imanishi·Deniz Demircioglu·Dan Hasson·Alan Soto·Stephanie McQuillan·Edgar Gonzalez-Kozlova·Rachel Brody·Benjamin Ungar·Maria Kasper·Ping Lu·Philip J. Torina·Jesse M. Lewin·Sacha Gnjatic·Sai Ma·A. Wilder
