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Mapping genotypes to chromatin accessibility profiles in single cells

Author

Listed:
  • Franco Izzo

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai)

  • Robert M. Myers

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Rockefeller University, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Saravanan Ganesan

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Levan Mekerishvili

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Sanjay Kottapalli

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Tamara Prieto

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Elliot O. Eton

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Rockefeller University, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Theo Botella

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Andrew J. Dunbar

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Robert L. Bowman

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Jesus Sotelo

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Catherine Potenski

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Eleni P. Mimitou

    (New York Genome Center
    Immunai)

  • Maximilian Stahl

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)

  • Sebastian El Ghaity-Beckley

    (Tisch Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai)

  • JoAnn Arandela

    (Tisch Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai)

  • Ramya Raviram

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Daniel C. Choi

    (Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Ronald Hoffman

    (Tisch Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai)

  • Ronan Chaligné

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Omar Abdel-Wahab

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Peter Smibert

    (New York Genome Center
    10x Genomics)

  • Irene M. Ghobrial

    (Dana-Farber Cancer Institute)

  • Joseph M. Scandura

    (Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

  • Bridget Marcellino

    (Tisch Cancer Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai)

  • Ross L. Levine

    (Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center)

  • Dan A. Landau

    (New York Genome Center
    Weill Cornell Medicine
    Weill Cornell Medicine)

Abstract

In somatic tissue differentiation, chromatin accessibility changes govern priming and precursor commitment towards cellular fates1–3. Therefore, somatic mutations are likely to alter chromatin accessibility patterns, as they disrupt differentiation topologies leading to abnormal clonal outgrowth. However, defining the impact of somatic mutations on the epigenome in human samples is challenging due to admixed mutated and wild-type cells. Here, to chart how somatic mutations disrupt epigenetic landscapes in human clonal outgrowths, we developed genotyping of targeted loci with single-cell chromatin accessibility (GoT–ChA). This high-throughput platform links genotypes to chromatin accessibility at single-cell resolution across thousands of cells within a single assay. We applied GoT–ChA to CD34+ cells from patients with myeloproliferative neoplasms with JAK2V617F-mutated haematopoiesis. Differential accessibility analysis between wild-type and JAK2V617F-mutant progenitors revealed both cell-intrinsic and cell-state-specific shifts within mutant haematopoietic precursors, including cell-intrinsic pro-inflammatory signatures in haematopoietic stem cells, and a distinct profibrotic inflammatory chromatin landscape in megakaryocytic progenitors. Integration of mitochondrial genome profiling and cell-surface protein expression measurement allowed expansion of genotyping onto DOGMA-seq through imputation, enabling single-cell capture of genotypes, chromatin accessibility, RNA expression and cell-surface protein expression. Collectively, we show that the JAK2V617F mutation leads to epigenetic rewiring in a cell-intrinsic and cell type-specific manner, influencing inflammation states and differentiation trajectories. We envision that GoT–ChA will empower broad future investigations of the critical link between somatic mutations and epigenetic alterations across clonal populations in malignant and non-malignant contexts.

Suggested Citation

  • Franco Izzo & Robert M. Myers & Saravanan Ganesan & Levan Mekerishvili & Sanjay Kottapalli & Tamara Prieto & Elliot O. Eton & Theo Botella & Andrew J. Dunbar & Robert L. Bowman & Jesus Sotelo & Cather, 2024. "Mapping genotypes to chromatin accessibility profiles in single cells," Nature, Nature, vol. 629(8014), pages 1149-1157, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:629:y:2024:i:8014:d:10.1038_s41586-024-07388-y
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07388-y
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