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
ISSN
2692-8205
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.