Single-cell ultra-high-throughput multiplexed chromatin and RNA profiling reveals gene regulatory dynamics
Lobato-Moreno, Sara; Yildiz, Umut; Claringbould, Annique; Servaas, Nila H.; Vlachou, Evi P.; Arnold, Christian; Bauersachs, Hanke Gwendolyn; Campos-Fornés, Víctor; Kim, Minyoung; Berest, Ivan; Prummel, Karin D.; Noh, Kyung Min; Marttinen, Mikael; Zaugg, Judith B. (2025-06)
Lobato-Moreno, Sara
Yildiz, Umut
Claringbould, Annique
Servaas, Nila H.
Vlachou, Evi P.
Arnold, Christian
Bauersachs, Hanke Gwendolyn
Campos-Fornés, Víctor
Kim, Minyoung
Berest, Ivan
Prummel, Karin D.
Noh, Kyung Min
Marttinen, Mikael
Zaugg, Judith B.
06 / 2025
Nature Methods
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202509048964
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202509048964
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Enhancers and transcription factors (TFs) are crucial in regulating cellular processes. Current multiomic technologies to study these elements in gene regulatory mechanisms lack multiplexing capability and scalability. Here we present single-cell ultra-high-throughput multiplexed sequencing (SUM-seq) for co-assaying chromatin accessibility and gene expression in single nuclei. SUM-seq enables profiling hundreds of samples at the million cell scale and outperforms current high-throughput single-cell methods. We demonstrate the capability of SUM-seq to (1) resolve temporal gene regulation of macrophage M1 and M2 polarization to bridge TF regulatory networks and immune disease genetic variants, (2) define the regulatory landscape of primary T helper cell subsets and (3) dissect the effect of perturbing lineage TFs via arrayed CRISPR screens in spontaneously differentiating human induced pluripotent stem cells. SUM-seq offers a cost-effective, scalable solution for ultra-high-throughput single-cell multiomic sequencing, accelerating the unraveling of complex gene regulatory networks in cell differentiation, responses to perturbations and disease studies.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [24684]
