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1.
Cell ; 187(3): 642-658.e19, 2024 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38218188

RESUMO

Despite advances in defining diverse somatic mutations that cause myeloid malignancies, a significant heritable component for these cancers remains largely unexplained. Here, we perform rare variant association studies in a large population cohort to identify inherited predisposition genes for these blood cancers. CTR9, which encodes a key component of the PAF1 transcription elongation complex, is among the significant genes identified. The risk variants found in the cases cause loss of function and result in a ∼10-fold increased odds of acquiring a myeloid malignancy. Partial CTR9 loss of function expands human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) by increased super elongation complex-mediated transcriptional activity, which thereby increases the expression of key regulators of HSC self-renewal. By following up on insights from a human genetic study examining inherited predisposition to the myeloid malignancies, we define a previously unknown antagonistic interaction between the PAF1 and super elongation complexes. These insights could enable targeted approaches for blood cancer prevention.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Hematológicas , Fosfoproteínas , Elongação da Transcrição Genética , Fatores de Transcrição , Humanos , Neoplasias Hematológicas/genética , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Proteínas Nucleares/metabolismo , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fosfoproteínas/genética
2.
Cell ; 186(19): 4005-4006, 2023 09 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37714132

RESUMO

Hematopoiesis requires balance between self-renewal of stem cells and differentiation into mature blood cells, orchestrated by pathways such as thrombopoietin signaling. In this issue of Cell, Tsutsumi et al. report the structure of the thrombopoietin ligand-receptor complex and demonstrate the potential to decouple its roles in self-renewal and hematopoietic differentiation.


Assuntos
Hematopoese , Trombopoetina , Diferenciação Celular , Membrana Celular , Transdução de Sinais
3.
Cell ; 186(4): 732-747.e16, 2023 02 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36803603

RESUMO

Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) have a number of unique physiologic adaptations that enable lifelong maintenance of blood cell production, including a highly regulated rate of protein synthesis. Yet, the precise vulnerabilities that arise from such adaptations have not been fully characterized. Here, inspired by a bone marrow failure disorder due to the loss of the histone deubiquitinase MYSM1, characterized by selectively disadvantaged HSCs, we show how reduced protein synthesis in HSCs results in increased ferroptosis. HSC maintenance can be fully rescued by blocking ferroptosis, despite no alteration in protein synthesis rates. Importantly, this selective vulnerability to ferroptosis not only underlies HSC loss in MYSM1 deficiency but also characterizes a broader liability of human HSCs. Increasing protein synthesis rates via MYSM1 overexpression makes HSCs less susceptible to ferroptosis, more broadly illustrating the selective vulnerabilities that arise in somatic stem cell populations as a result of physiologic adaptations.


Assuntos
Ferroptose , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Humanos , Endopeptidases/metabolismo , Hematopoese , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Transativadores/metabolismo , Proteases Específicas de Ubiquitina/metabolismo
4.
Cell ; 186(11): 2456-2474.e24, 2023 05 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37137305

RESUMO

Systematic evaluation of the impact of genetic variants is critical for the study and treatment of human physiology and disease. While specific mutations can be introduced by genome engineering, we still lack scalable approaches that are applicable to the important setting of primary cells, such as blood and immune cells. Here, we describe the development of massively parallel base-editing screens in human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. Such approaches enable functional screens for variant effects across any hematopoietic differentiation state. Moreover, they allow for rich phenotyping through single-cell RNA sequencing readouts and separately for characterization of editing outcomes through pooled single-cell genotyping. We efficiently design improved leukemia immunotherapy approaches, comprehensively identify non-coding variants modulating fetal hemoglobin expression, define mechanisms regulating hematopoietic differentiation, and probe the pathogenicity of uncharacterized disease-associated variants. These strategies will advance effective and high-throughput variant-to-function mapping in human hematopoiesis to identify the causes of diverse diseases.


Assuntos
Edição de Genes , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Humanos , Diferenciação Celular , Sistemas CRISPR-Cas , Genoma , Hematopoese , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Engenharia Genética , Análise de Célula Única
5.
Cell ; 185(22): 4233-4248.e27, 2022 10 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36306736

RESUMO

The human genome contains hundreds of thousands of regions harboring copy-number variants (CNV). However, the phenotypic effects of most such polymorphisms are unknown because only larger CNVs have been ascertainable from SNP-array data generated by large biobanks. We developed a computational approach leveraging haplotype sharing in biobank cohorts to more sensitively detect CNVs. Applied to UK Biobank, this approach accounted for approximately half of all rare gene inactivation events produced by genomic structural variation. This CNV call set enabled a detailed analysis of associations between CNVs and 56 quantitative traits, identifying 269 independent associations (p < 5 × 10-8) likely to be causally driven by CNVs. Putative target genes were identifiable for nearly half of the loci, enabling insights into dosage sensitivity of these genes and uncovering several gene-trait relationships. These results demonstrate the ability of haplotype-informed analysis to provide insights into the genetic basis of human complex traits.


Assuntos
Herança Multifatorial , Locos de Características Quantitativas , Humanos , Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA , Fenótipo , Genoma Humano , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único/genética
6.
Cell ; 185(4): 690-711.e45, 2022 02 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35108499

RESUMO

Single-cell (sc)RNA-seq, together with RNA velocity and metabolic labeling, reveals cellular states and transitions at unprecedented resolution. Fully exploiting these data, however, requires kinetic models capable of unveiling governing regulatory functions. Here, we introduce an analytical framework dynamo (https://github.com/aristoteleo/dynamo-release), which infers absolute RNA velocity, reconstructs continuous vector fields that predict cell fates, employs differential geometry to extract underlying regulations, and ultimately predicts optimal reprogramming paths and perturbation outcomes. We highlight dynamo's power to overcome fundamental limitations of conventional splicing-based RNA velocity analyses to enable accurate velocity estimations on a metabolically labeled human hematopoiesis scRNA-seq dataset. Furthermore, differential geometry analyses reveal mechanisms driving early megakaryocyte appearance and elucidate asymmetrical regulation within the PU.1-GATA1 circuit. Leveraging the least-action-path method, dynamo accurately predicts drivers of numerous hematopoietic transitions. Finally, in silico perturbations predict cell-fate diversions induced by gene perturbations. Dynamo, thus, represents an important step in advancing quantitative and predictive theories of cell-state transitions.


Assuntos
Análise de Célula Única , Transcriptoma/genética , Algoritmos , Feminino , Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Células HL-60 , Hematopoese/genética , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Humanos , Cinética , Modelos Biológicos , RNA Mensageiro/metabolismo , Coloração e Rotulagem
7.
Nat Immunol ; 24(1): 69-83, 2023 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36522544

RESUMO

The molecular regulation of human hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) maintenance is therapeutically important, but limitations in experimental systems and interspecies variation have constrained our knowledge of this process. Here, we have studied a rare genetic disorder due to MECOM haploinsufficiency, characterized by an early-onset absence of HSCs in vivo. By generating a faithful model of this disorder in primary human HSCs and coupling functional studies with integrative single-cell genomic analyses, we uncover a key transcriptional network involving hundreds of genes that is required for HSC maintenance. Through our analyses, we nominate cooperating transcriptional regulators and identify how MECOM prevents the CTCF-dependent genome reorganization that occurs as HSCs differentiate. We show that this transcriptional network is co-opted in high-risk leukemias, thereby enabling these cancers to acquire stem cell properties. Collectively, we illuminate a regulatory network necessary for HSC self-renewal through the study of a rare experiment of nature.


Assuntos
Leucemia , Neoplasias , Humanos , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Leucemia/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Diferenciação Celular/genética
8.
Cell ; 182(6): 1384-1400, 2020 09 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32946781

RESUMO

Hematopoiesis has long served as a paradigm of stem cell biology and tissue homeostasis. In the past decade, the genomics revolution has ushered in powerful new methods for investigating the hematopoietic system that have provided transformative insights into its biology. As part of the advances in genomics, increasingly accurate deep sequencing and novel methods of cell tracking have revealed hematopoiesis to be more of a continuous and less of a discrete and punctuated process than originally envisioned. In part, this continuous nature of hematopoiesis is made possible by the emergent outcomes of vast, interconnected regulatory networks that influence cell fates and lineage commitment. It is also becoming clear how these mechanisms are modulated by genetic variation present throughout the population. This review describes how these recently uncovered complexities are reshaping our concept of tissue development and homeostasis while opening up a more comprehensive future understanding of hematopoiesis.


Assuntos
Linhagem da Célula , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento , Hematopoese/genética , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Animais , Linhagem da Célula/genética , Linhagem da Célula/fisiologia , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento/genética , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento/fisiologia , Genômica , Homeostase , Genética Humana , Humanos , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo
9.
Cell ; 180(1): 6, 2020 01 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31951520

RESUMO

Erythropoietin (EPO) production in the kidney is regulated by the oxygen-sensing transcription factor HIF-1α, which is degraded under normoxic conditions by HIF-prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PHD). Inhibition of HIF-PHD by roxadustat leads to increased EPO production, better iron absorption, and amelioration of anemia in chronic kidney disease (CKD).


Assuntos
Anemia/terapia , Glicina/análogos & derivados , Fator 1 Induzível por Hipóxia/metabolismo , Isoquinolinas/uso terapêutico , Anemia/metabolismo , Glicina/uso terapêutico , Humanos , Fator 1 Induzível por Hipóxia/efeitos dos fármacos , Rim/metabolismo , Rim/patologia , Prolil Hidroxilases/efeitos dos fármacos , Prolil Hidroxilases/metabolismo , Insuficiência Renal Crônica/tratamento farmacológico , Insuficiência Renal Crônica/metabolismo
10.
Cell ; 176(6): 1325-1339.e22, 2019 03 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30827679

RESUMO

Lineage tracing provides key insights into the fate of individual cells in complex organisms. Although effective genetic labeling approaches are available in model systems, in humans, most approaches require detection of nuclear somatic mutations, which have high error rates, limited scale, and do not capture cell state information. Here, we show that somatic mutations in mtDNA can be tracked by single-cell RNA or assay for transposase accessible chromatin (ATAC) sequencing. We leverage somatic mtDNA mutations as natural genetic barcodes and demonstrate their utility as highly accurate clonal markers to infer cellular relationships. We track native human cells both in vitro and in vivo and relate clonal dynamics to gene expression and chromatin accessibility. Our approach should allow clonal tracking at a 1,000-fold greater scale than with nuclear genome sequencing, with simultaneous information on cell state, opening the way to chart cellular dynamics in human health and disease.


Assuntos
DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Mitocôndrias/genética , Sequência de Bases , Linhagem da Célula , Cromatina , Neoplasias Colorretais/genética , Neoplasias Colorretais/patologia , Genômica/métodos , Células HEK293 , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/fisiologia , Sequenciamento de Nucleotídeos em Larga Escala/métodos , Humanos , Mutação , Análise de Célula Única , Transposases
11.
Cell ; 173(1): 90-103.e19, 2018 03 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29551269

RESUMO

Blood cell formation is classically thought to occur through a hierarchical differentiation process, although recent studies have shown that lineage commitment may occur earlier in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). The relevance to human blood diseases and the underlying regulation of these refined models remain poorly understood. By studying a genetic blood disorder, Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA), where the majority of mutations affect ribosomal proteins and the erythroid lineage is selectively perturbed, we are able to gain mechanistic insight into how lineage commitment is programmed normally and disrupted in disease. We show that in DBA, the pool of available ribosomes is limited, while ribosome composition remains constant. Surprisingly, this global reduction in ribosome levels more profoundly alters translation of a select subset of transcripts. We show how the reduced translation of select transcripts in HSPCs can impair erythroid lineage commitment, illuminating a regulatory role for ribosome levels in cellular differentiation.


Assuntos
Anemia de Diamond-Blackfan/patologia , Ribossomos/metabolismo , Regiões 5' não Traduzidas , Anemia de Diamond-Blackfan/genética , Proteínas Reguladoras de Apoptose/antagonistas & inibidores , Proteínas Reguladoras de Apoptose/genética , Proteínas Reguladoras de Apoptose/metabolismo , Células da Medula Óssea/metabolismo , Células Cultivadas , Feminino , Fator de Transcrição GATA1/genética , Fator de Transcrição GATA1/metabolismo , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/citologia , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Humanos , Masculino , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto , Interferência de RNA , RNA Interferente Pequeno/metabolismo , Proteínas Ribossômicas/antagonistas & inibidores , Proteínas Ribossômicas/genética , Proteínas Ribossômicas/metabolismo , Ribossomos/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo
12.
Cell ; 168(6): 1053-1064.e15, 2017 03 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28283061

RESUMO

Cytokines are classically thought to stimulate downstream signaling pathways through monotonic activation of receptors. We describe a severe anemia resulting from a homozygous mutation (R150Q) in the cytokine erythropoietin (EPO). Surprisingly, the EPO R150Q mutant shows only a mild reduction in affinity for its receptor but has altered binding kinetics. The EPO mutant is less effective at stimulating erythroid cell proliferation and differentiation, even at maximally potent concentrations. While the EPO mutant can stimulate effectors such as STAT5 to a similar extent as the wild-type ligand, there is reduced JAK2-mediated phosphorylation of select downstream targets. This impairment in downstream signaling mechanistically arises from altered receptor dimerization dynamics due to extracellular binding changes. These results demonstrate how variation in a single cytokine can lead to biased downstream signaling and can thereby cause human disease. Moreover, we have defined a distinct treatable form of anemia through mutation identification and functional studies.


Assuntos
Anemia de Diamond-Blackfan/genética , Anemia de Diamond-Blackfan/patologia , Eritropoetina/genética , Mutação de Sentido Incorreto , Transdução de Sinais , Anemia de Diamond-Blackfan/terapia , Criança , Consanguinidade , Ativação Enzimática , Eritropoese , Eritropoetina/química , Feminino , Humanos , Janus Quinase 2/metabolismo , Cinética , Masculino , Receptores da Eritropoetina/química , Receptores da Eritropoetina/genética , Receptores da Eritropoetina/metabolismo
13.
Cell ; 165(6): 1530-1545, 2016 Jun 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27259154

RESUMO

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have successfully identified thousands of associations between common genetic variants and human disease phenotypes, but the majority of these variants are non-coding, often requiring genetic fine-mapping, epigenomic profiling, and individual reporter assays to delineate potential causal variants. We employ a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) to simultaneously screen 2,756 variants in strong linkage disequilibrium with 75 sentinel variants associated with red blood cell traits. We show that this assay identifies elements with endogenous erythroid regulatory activity. Across 23 sentinel variants, we conservatively identified 32 MPRA functional variants (MFVs). We used targeted genome editing to demonstrate endogenous enhancer activity across 3 MFVs that predominantly affect the transcription of SMIM1, RBM38, and CD164. Functional follow-up of RBM38 delineates a key role for this gene in the alternative splicing program occurring during terminal erythropoiesis. Finally, we provide evidence for how common GWAS-nominated variants can disrupt cell-type-specific transcriptional regulatory pathways.


Assuntos
Eritrócitos , Técnicas Genéticas , Variação Genética , Processamento Alternativo , Linhagem Celular , Linhagem da Célula/genética , Eritropoese/genética , Biblioteca Gênica , Genes Reporter , Humanos , Sequências Reguladoras de Ácido Nucleico , Transcrição Gênica
14.
Nature ; 627(8003): 389-398, 2024 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38253266

RESUMO

The human blood system is maintained through the differentiation and massive amplification of a limited number of long-lived haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs)1. Perturbations to this process underlie diverse diseases, but the clonal contributions to human haematopoiesis and how this changes with age remain incompletely understood. Although recent insights have emerged from barcoding studies in model systems2-5, simultaneous detection of cell states and phylogenies from natural barcodes in humans remains challenging. Here we introduce an improved, single-cell lineage-tracing system based on deep detection of naturally occurring mitochondrial DNA mutations with simultaneous readout of transcriptional states and chromatin accessibility. We use this system to define the clonal architecture of HSCs and map the physiological state and output of clones. We uncover functional heterogeneity in HSC clones, which is stable over months and manifests as both differences in total HSC output and biases towards the production of different mature cell types. We also find that the diversity of HSC clones decreases markedly with age, leading to an oligoclonal structure with multiple distinct clonal expansions. Our study thus provides a clonally resolved and cell-state-aware atlas of human haematopoiesis at single-cell resolution, showing an unappreciated functional diversity of human HSC clones and, more broadly, paving the way for refined studies of clonal dynamics across a range of tissues in human health and disease.


Assuntos
Linhagem da Célula , Hematopoese , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas , Humanos , Cromatina/genética , Cromatina/metabolismo , Células Clonais/classificação , Células Clonais/citologia , Células Clonais/metabolismo , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/classificação , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/citologia , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/metabolismo , Mutação , Análise de Célula Única , Transcrição Gênica , Envelhecimento
15.
Nature ; 2024 Jun 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38867047

RESUMO

Mosaic loss of the X chromosome (mLOX) is the most common clonal somatic alteration in leukocytes of female individuals1,2, but little is known about its genetic determinants or phenotypic consequences. Here, to address this, we used data from 883,574 female participants across 8 biobanks; 12% of participants exhibited detectable mLOX in approximately 2% of leukocytes. Female participants with mLOX had an increased risk of myeloid and lymphoid leukaemias. Genetic analyses identified 56 common variants associated with mLOX, implicating genes with roles in chromosomal missegregation, cancer predisposition and autoimmune diseases. Exome-sequence analyses identified rare missense variants in FBXO10 that confer a twofold increased risk of mLOX. Only a small fraction of associations was shared with mosaic Y chromosome loss, suggesting that distinct biological processes drive formation and clonal expansion of sex chromosome missegregation. Allelic shift analyses identified X chromosome alleles that are preferentially retained in mLOX, demonstrating variation at many loci under cellular selection. A polygenic score including 44 allelic shift loci correctly inferred the retained X chromosomes in 80.7% of mLOX cases in the top decile. Our results support a model in which germline variants predispose female individuals to acquiring mLOX, with the allelic content of the X chromosome possibly shaping the magnitude of clonal expansion.

16.
Am J Hum Genet ; 111(5): 863-876, 2024 May 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38565148

RESUMO

Copy number variants (CNVs) are significant contributors to the pathogenicity of rare genetic diseases and, with new innovative methods, can now reliably be identified from exome sequencing. Challenges still remain in accurate classification of CNV pathogenicity. CNV calling using GATK-gCNV was performed on exomes from a cohort of 6,633 families (15,759 individuals) with heterogeneous phenotypes and variable prior genetic testing collected at the Broad Institute Center for Mendelian Genomics of the Genomics Research to Elucidate the Genetics of Rare Diseases consortium and analyzed using the seqr platform. The addition of CNV detection to exome analysis identified causal CNVs for 171 families (2.6%). The estimated sizes of CNVs ranged from 293 bp to 80 Mb. The causal CNVs consisted of 140 deletions, 15 duplications, 3 suspected complex structural variants (SVs), 3 insertions, and 10 complex SVs, the latter two groups being identified by orthogonal confirmation methods. To classify CNV variant pathogenicity, we used the 2020 American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/ClinGen CNV interpretation standards and developed additional criteria to evaluate allelic and functional data as well as variants on the X chromosome to further advance the framework. We interpreted 151 CNVs as likely pathogenic/pathogenic and 20 CNVs as high-interest variants of uncertain significance. Calling CNVs from existing exome data increases the diagnostic yield for individuals undiagnosed after standard testing approaches, providing a higher-resolution alternative to arrays at a fraction of the cost of genome sequencing. Our improvements to the classification approach advances the systematic framework to assess the pathogenicity of CNVs.


Assuntos
Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA , Sequenciamento do Exoma , Exoma , Doenças Raras , Humanos , Variações do Número de Cópias de DNA/genética , Doenças Raras/genética , Doenças Raras/diagnóstico , Exoma/genética , Masculino , Feminino , Estudos de Coortes , Testes Genéticos/métodos
17.
N Engl J Med ; 390(21): 1985-1997, 2024 Jun 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38838312

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Genetic variants that cause rare disorders may remain elusive even after expansive testing, such as exome sequencing. The diagnostic yield of genome sequencing, particularly after a negative evaluation, remains poorly defined. METHODS: We sequenced and analyzed the genomes of families with diverse phenotypes who were suspected to have a rare monogenic disease and for whom genetic testing had not revealed a diagnosis, as well as the genomes of a replication cohort at an independent clinical center. RESULTS: We sequenced the genomes of 822 families (744 in the initial cohort and 78 in the replication cohort) and made a molecular diagnosis in 218 of 744 families (29.3%). Of the 218 families, 61 (28.0%) - 8.2% of families in the initial cohort - had variants that required genome sequencing for identification, including coding variants, intronic variants, small structural variants, copy-neutral inversions, complex rearrangements, and tandem repeat expansions. Most families in which a molecular diagnosis was made after previous nondiagnostic exome sequencing (63.5%) had variants that could be detected by reanalysis of the exome-sequence data (53.4%) or by additional analytic methods, such as copy-number variant calling, to exome-sequence data (10.8%). We obtained similar results in the replication cohort: in 33% of the families in which a molecular diagnosis was made, or 8% of the cohort, genome sequencing was required, which showed the applicability of these findings to both research and clinical environments. CONCLUSIONS: The diagnostic yield of genome sequencing in a large, diverse research cohort and in a small clinical cohort of persons who had previously undergone genetic testing was approximately 8% and included several types of pathogenic variation that had not previously been detected by means of exome sequencing or other techniques. (Funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute and others.).


Assuntos
Variação Genética , Doenças Raras , Sequenciamento Completo do Genoma , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Estudos de Coortes , Exoma , Sequenciamento do Exoma , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/diagnóstico , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/etnologia , Doenças Genéticas Inatas/genética , Testes Genéticos , Genoma Humano , Fenótipo , Doenças Raras/diagnóstico , Doenças Raras/etnologia , Doenças Raras/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Criança , Adolescente , Adulto Jovem , Adulto
18.
Nature ; 586(7831): 769-775, 2020 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33057200

RESUMO

Myeloproliferative neoplasms (MPNs) are blood cancers that are characterized by the excessive production of mature myeloid cells and arise from the acquisition of somatic driver mutations in haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Epidemiological studies indicate a substantial heritable component of MPNs that is among the highest known for cancers1. However, only a limited number of genetic risk loci have been identified, and the underlying biological mechanisms that lead to the acquisition of MPNs remain unclear. Here, by conducting a large-scale genome-wide association study (3,797 cases and 1,152,977 controls), we identify 17 MPN risk loci (P < 5.0 × 10-8), 7 of which have not been previously reported. We find that there is a shared genetic architecture between MPN risk and several haematopoietic traits from distinct lineages; that there is an enrichment for MPN risk variants within accessible chromatin of HSCs; and that increased MPN risk is associated with longer telomere length in leukocytes and other clonal haematopoietic states-collectively suggesting that MPN risk is associated with the function and self-renewal of HSCs. We use gene mapping to identify modulators of HSC biology linked to MPN risk, and show through targeted variant-to-function assays that CHEK2 and GFI1B have roles in altering the function of HSCs to confer disease risk. Overall, our results reveal a previously unappreciated mechanism for inherited MPN risk through the modulation of HSC function.


Assuntos
Predisposição Genética para Doença/genética , Células-Tronco Hematopoéticas/patologia , Transtornos Mieloproliferativos/genética , Transtornos Mieloproliferativos/patologia , Neoplasias/genética , Neoplasias/patologia , Linhagem da Célula/genética , Autorrenovação Celular , Quinase do Ponto de Checagem 2/genética , Feminino , Humanos , Leucócitos/patologia , Masculino , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas/genética , Proteínas Repressoras/genética , Risco , Homeostase do Telômero
19.
PLoS Genet ; 18(1): e1009984, 2022 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35100265

RESUMO

Existing studies of chromatin conformation have primarily focused on potential enhancers interacting with gene promoters. By contrast, the interactivity of promoters per se, while equally critical to understanding transcriptional control, has been largely unexplored, particularly in a cell type-specific manner for blood lineage cell types. In this study, we leverage promoter capture Hi-C data across a compendium of blood lineage cell types to identify and characterize cell type-specific super-interactive promoters (SIPs). Notably, promoter-interacting regions (PIRs) of SIPs are more likely to overlap with cell type-specific ATAC-seq peaks and GWAS variants for relevant blood cell traits than PIRs of non-SIPs. Moreover, PIRs of cell-type-specific SIPs show enriched heritability of relevant blood cell trait (s), and are more enriched with GWAS variants associated with blood cell traits compared to PIRs of non-SIPs. Further, SIP genes tend to express at a higher level in the corresponding cell type. Importantly, SIP subnetworks incorporating cell-type-specific SIPs and ATAC-seq peaks help interpret GWAS variants. Examples include GWAS variants associated with platelet count near the megakaryocyte SIP gene EPHB3 and variants associated lymphocyte count near the native CD4 T-Cell SIP gene ETS1. Interestingly, around 25.7% ~ 39.6% blood cell traits GWAS variants residing in SIP PIR regions disrupt transcription factor binding motifs. Importantly, our analysis shows the potential of using promoter-centric analyses of chromatin spatial organization data to identify biologically important genes and their regulatory regions.


Assuntos
Células Sanguíneas/metabolismo , Linhagem da Célula/genética , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Regiões Promotoras Genéticas , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla , Humanos , Proteína Proto-Oncogênica c-ets-1/genética , Receptor EphB3/genética
20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(34): e2207392119, 2022 08 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35969771

RESUMO

Regulatory relationships between transcription factors (TFs) and their target genes lie at the heart of cellular identity and function; however, uncovering these relationships is often labor-intensive and requires perturbations. Here, we propose a principled framework to systematically infer gene regulation for all TFs simultaneously in cells at steady state by leveraging the intrinsic variation in the transcriptional abundance across single cells. Through modeling and simulations, we characterize how transcriptional bursts of a TF gene are propagated to its target genes, including the expected ranges of time delay and magnitude of maximum covariation. We distinguish these temporal trends from the time-invariant covariation arising from cell states, and we delineate the experimental and technical requirements for leveraging these small but meaningful cofluctuations in the presence of measurement noise. While current technology does not yet allow adequate power for definitively detecting regulatory relationships for all TFs simultaneously in cells at steady state, we investigate a small-scale dataset to inform future experimental design. This study supports the potential value of mapping regulatory connections through stochastic variation, and it motivates further technological development to achieve its full potential.


Assuntos
Regulação da Expressão Gênica , Modelos Biológicos , Fatores de Transcrição , Simulação por Computador , Redes Reguladoras de Genes , Fatores de Transcrição/genética , Fatores de Transcrição/metabolismo
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