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MINGL Quantifies Borders, Gradients, and Heterogeneity in Multicellular Tissue Organization.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Van Batavia, K; Wright, J; Chen, A; Li, Y; Hickey, JW
Published in: bioRxiv
March 26, 2026

Tissues are organized with interacting multicellular organizational units whose interfaces and transitions shape function in health and disease. Current spatial-omics analyses typically assign cells to a single cellular neighborhood-ignoring natural gradients, heterogeneity, and borders. Here we present MINGL (Mixture-based Identification of Neighborhood Gradients with Likelihood estimates), a probabilistic framework that converts existing neighborhood annotations into continuous measures of tissue architecture. MINGL models each cell by multi-membership probabilities across hierarchical organizational units and uses these probabilities to identify enriched cells at interfaces between units, constructs interaction networks across hierarchical scales, quantifies compositional gradient transitions, measures context-specific composition heterogeneity, and provides a starting point for neighborhood resolution. Across multiple spatial-omic datasets spanning melanoma, healthy intestine, and Barrett's Esophagus progression, MINGL detected innate immune-enriched interfaces at tumor and anatomical interfaces, plasma cell niches linking cellular neighborhoods, distinct regimes of sharp and gradual transitions between organizational states, and disease-associated neighborhood remodeling. By treating neighborhood assignment uncertainty as a biological signal rather than noise, MINGL unifies discrete and continuous representations of tissue organization and makes tissue architecture measurable, comparable, and scalable across biological scales and spatial-omics platforms.

Duke Scholars

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

March 26, 2026

Location

United States
 

Citation

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Van Batavia, K., Wright, J., Chen, A., Li, Y., & Hickey, J. W. (2026). MINGL Quantifies Borders, Gradients, and Heterogeneity in Multicellular Tissue Organization. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.03.24.713296
Van Batavia, Kyra, James Wright, Annette Chen, Yuexi Li, and John W. Hickey. “MINGL Quantifies Borders, Gradients, and Heterogeneity in Multicellular Tissue Organization.BioRxiv, March 26, 2026. https://doi.org/10.64898/2026.03.24.713296.
Van Batavia K, Wright J, Chen A, Li Y, Hickey JW. MINGL Quantifies Borders, Gradients, and Heterogeneity in Multicellular Tissue Organization. bioRxiv. 2026 Mar 26;
Van Batavia, Kyra, et al. “MINGL Quantifies Borders, Gradients, and Heterogeneity in Multicellular Tissue Organization.BioRxiv, Mar. 2026. Pubmed, doi:10.64898/2026.03.24.713296.
Van Batavia K, Wright J, Chen A, Li Y, Hickey JW. MINGL Quantifies Borders, Gradients, and Heterogeneity in Multicellular Tissue Organization. bioRxiv. 2026 Mar 26;

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

March 26, 2026

Location

United States