Abstract

Understanding complex tissues requires single-cell deconstruction of gene regulation with precision and scale. Here we present a massively parallel droplet-based platform for mapping transposase-accessible chromatin in tens of thousands of single cells per sample (scATAC-seq). We obtain and analyze chromatin profiles of over 200,000 single cells in two primary human systems. In blood, scATAC-seq allows marker-free identification of cell type-specific cis- and trans-regulatory elements, mapping of disease-associated enhancer activity, and reconstruction of trajectories of differentiation from progenitors to diverse and rare immune cell types. In basal cell carcinoma, scATAC-seq reveals regulatory landscapes of malignant, stromal, and immune cell types in the tumor microenvironment. Moreover, scATAC-seq of serial tumor biopsies before and after PD-1 blockade allows identification of chromatin regulators and differentiation trajectories of therapy-responsive intratumoral T cell subsets, revealing a shared regulatory program driving CD8+ T cell exhaustion and CD4+ T follicular helper cell development. We anticipate that droplet-based single-cell chromatin accessibility will provide a broadly applicable means of identifying regulatory factors and elements that underlie cell type and function.

Details

Title
Massively parallel single-cell chromatin landscapes of human immune cell development and intratumoral T cell exhaustion
Author
Satpathy, Ansuman T; Granja, Jeffrey M; Yost, Kathryn E; Qi, Yanyan; Meschi, Francesca; Mcdermott, Geoffrey P; Olsen, Brett N; Mumbach, Maxwell R; Pierce, Sarah E; M Ryan Corces; Shah, Preyas; Bell, Jason C; Jhutty, Darisha; Nemec, Corey M; Wang, Jean; Wang, Li; Yin, Yifeng; Giresi, Paul G; Chang, Anne Lynn S; Zheng, Grace X Y; Greenleaf, William J; Chang, Howard Y
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Section
New Results
Publication year
2019
Publication date
Apr 18, 2019
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2211214003
Copyright
© 2019. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (“the License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.