The Human Breast Cell Atlas, recently published in Nature, is a landmark achievement for mammary biology as the world’s most comprehensive atlas of healthy breast tissue. The current “atlas era” of cell biology represents a marked shift in the field. Whereas the physiological importance of the cell was not realized until nearly two centuries after their initial 1665 discovery
Mapping the Human Cell Atlas - charting the body's cellular world - Wellcome Sanger Institute Blog
IsoSeek – unbiased and UMI-informed sequencing of cell-free miRNAs at single-nucleotide resolution
Cancers, Free Full-Text
A spatially resolved single cell genomic atlas of the adult human breast
NCI Human Tumor Atlas Network
Spatially resolved single-cell transcriptomic atlas of developing
CircNet – a database of circular RNAs derived from transcriptome sequencing data
The Human Cell Atlas and Beyond: An Introduction to Single-Cell Data Atlases
HBCA Main Page
High-resolution single-cell atlas reveals diversity and plasticity of tissue-resident neutrophils in non-small cell lung cancer
flowchart RNA-Seq Blog
The evolution of single-cell RNA sequencing technology and application: progress and perspectives
World's Largest Map of Normal Breast Tissue Created