scholarly journals Manifold alignment reveals correspondence between single cell transcriptome and epigenome dynamics

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua D. Welch ◽  
Alexander J. Hartemink ◽  
Jan F. Prins

AbstractSingle cell genomic techniques promise to yield key insights into the dynamic interplay between gene expression and epigenetic modification. However, the experimental difficulty of performing multiple measurements on the same cell currently limits efforts to combine multiple genomic data sets into a united picture of single cell variation. We show that it is possible to construct cell trajectories, reflecting the changes that occur in a sequential biological process, from single cell ATAC-seq, bisulfite sequencing, and ChIP-seq data. In addition, we present an approach called MATCHER that computationally circumvents the experimental difficulties inherent in performing multiple genomic measurements on a single cell by inferring correspondence between single cell transcriptomic and epigenetic measurements performed on different cells of the same type. MATCHER works by first learning a separate manifold for the trajectory of each kind of genomic data, then aligning the manifolds to infer a shared trajectory in which cells measured using different techniques are directly comparable. Using scM&T-seq data, we confirm that MATCHER accurately predicts true single cell correlations between DNA methylation and gene expression without using known cell correspondence information. We also used MATCHER to infer correlations among gene expression, chromatin accessibility, and histone modifications in single mouse embryonic stem cells. These results reveal the dynamic interplay between epigenetic changes and gene expression underlying the transition from pluripotency to differentiation priming. Our work is a first step toward a united picture of heterogeneous transcriptomic and epigenetic states in single cells.


2021 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Bhupinder Pal ◽  
Yunshun Chen ◽  
Michael J. G. Milevskiy ◽  
François Vaillant ◽  
Lexie Prokopuk ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Heterogeneity within the mouse mammary epithelium and potential lineage relationships have been recently explored by single-cell RNA profiling. To further understand how cellular diversity changes during mammary ontogeny, we profiled single cells from nine different developmental stages spanning late embryogenesis, early postnatal, prepuberty, adult, mid-pregnancy, late-pregnancy, and post-involution, as well as the transcriptomes of micro-dissected terminal end buds (TEBs) and subtending ducts during puberty. Methods The single cell transcriptomes of 132,599 mammary epithelial cells from 9 different developmental stages were determined on the 10x Genomics Chromium platform, and integrative analyses were performed to compare specific time points. Results The mammary rudiment at E18.5 closely aligned with the basal lineage, while prepubertal epithelial cells exhibited lineage segregation but to a less differentiated state than their adult counterparts. Comparison of micro-dissected TEBs versus ducts showed that luminal cells within TEBs harbored intermediate expression profiles. Ductal basal cells exhibited increased chromatin accessibility of luminal genes compared to their TEB counterparts suggesting that lineage-specific chromatin is established within the subtending ducts during puberty. An integrative analysis of five stages spanning the pregnancy cycle revealed distinct stage-specific profiles and the presence of cycling basal, mixed-lineage, and 'late' alveolar intermediates in pregnancy. Moreover, a number of intermediates were uncovered along the basal-luminal progenitor cell axis, suggesting a continuum of alveolar-restricted progenitor states. Conclusions This extended single cell transcriptome atlas of mouse mammary epithelial cells provides the most complete coverage for mammary epithelial cells during morphogenesis to date. Together with chromatin accessibility analysis of TEB structures, it represents a valuable framework for understanding developmental decisions within the mouse mammary gland.



2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Bonora ◽  
Vijay Ramani ◽  
Ritambhara Singh ◽  
He Fang ◽  
Dana L. Jackson ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Mammalian development is associated with extensive changes in gene expression, chromatin accessibility, and nuclear structure. Here, we follow such changes associated with mouse embryonic stem cell differentiation and X inactivation by integrating, for the first time, allele-specific data from these three modalities obtained by high-throughput single-cell RNA-seq, ATAC-seq, and Hi-C. Results Allele-specific contact decay profiles obtained by single-cell Hi-C clearly show that the inactive X chromosome has a unique profile in differentiated cells that have undergone X inactivation. Loss of this inactive X-specific structure at mitosis is followed by its reappearance during the cell cycle, suggesting a “bookmark” mechanism. Differentiation of embryonic stem cells to follow the onset of X inactivation is associated with changes in contact decay profiles that occur in parallel on both the X chromosomes and autosomes. Single-cell RNA-seq and ATAC-seq show evidence of a delay in female versus male cells, due to the presence of two active X chromosomes at early stages of differentiation. The onset of the inactive X-specific structure in single cells occurs later than gene silencing, consistent with the idea that chromatin compaction is a late event of X inactivation. Single-cell Hi-C highlights evidence of discrete changes in nuclear structure characterized by the acquisition of very long-range contacts throughout the nucleus. Novel computational approaches allow for the effective alignment of single-cell gene expression, chromatin accessibility, and 3D chromosome structure. Conclusions Based on trajectory analyses, three distinct nuclear structure states are detected reflecting discrete and profound simultaneous changes not only to the structure of the X chromosomes, but also to that of autosomes during differentiation. Our study reveals that long-range structural changes to chromosomes appear as discrete events, unlike progressive changes in gene expression and chromatin accessibility.



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giancarlo Bonora ◽  
Vijay Ramani ◽  
Ritambhara Singh ◽  
He Fang ◽  
Dana Jackson ◽  
...  

AbstractMammalian development is associated with extensive changes in gene expression, chromatin accessibility, and nuclear structure. Here, we follow such changes associated with mouse embryonic stem cell differentiation and X inactivation by integrating, for the first time, allele-specific data obtained by high-throughput single-cell RNA-seq, ATAC-seq, and Hi-C. In differentiated cells, contact decay profiles, which clearly distinguish the active and inactive X chromosomes, reveal loss of the inactive X-specific structure at mitosis followed by a rapid reappearance, suggesting a ‘bookkeeping’ mechanism. In differentiating embryonic stem cells, changes in contact decay profiles are detected in parallel on both the X chromosomes and autosomes, suggesting profound simultaneous reorganization. The onset of the inactive X-specific structure in single cells is notably delayed relative to that of gene silencing, consistent with the idea that chromatin compaction is a late event of X inactivation. Novel computational approaches to effectively align single-cell gene expression, chromatin accessibility, and 3D chromosome structure reveal that long-range structural changes to chromosomes appear as discrete events, unlike progressive changes in gene expression and chromatin accessibility.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Kopp ◽  
Altuna Akalin ◽  
Uwe Ohler

Advances in single-cell technologies enable the routine interrogation of chromatin accessibility for tens of thousands of single cells, shedding light on gene regulatory processes at an unprecedented resolution. Meanwhile, size, sparsity and high dimensionality of the resulting data continue to pose challenges for its computational analysis, and specifically the integration of data from different sources. We have developed a dedicated computational approach, a variational auto-encoder using a noise model specifically designed for single-cell ATAC-seq data, which facilitates simultaneous dimensionality reduction and batch correction via an adversarial learning strategy. We showcase both its individual advantages on carefully chosen real and simulated data sets, as well as the benefits for detailed cell type characterization via integrating multiple complex datasets.



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Lei ◽  
Mengnan Cheng ◽  
Zihao Li ◽  
Zhenkun Zhuang ◽  
Liang Wu ◽  
...  

Non-human primates (NHP) provide a unique opportunity to study human neurological diseases, yet detailed characterization of the cell types and transcriptional regulatory features in the NHP brain is lacking. We applied a combinatorial indexing assay, sci-ATAC-seq, as well as single-nuclei RNA-seq, to profile chromatin accessibility in 43,793 single cells and transcriptomics in 11,477 cells, respectively, from prefrontal cortex, primary motor cortex and the primary visual cortex of adult cynomolgus monkey Macaca fascularis. Integrative analysis of these two datasets, resolved regulatory elements and transcription factors that specify cell type distinctions, and discovered area-specific diversity in chromatin accessibility and gene expression within excitatory neurons. We also constructed the dynamic landscape of chromatin accessibility and gene expression of oligodendrocyte maturation to characterize adult remyelination. Furthermore, we identified cell type-specific enrichment of differentially spliced gene isoforms and disease-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms. Our datasets permit integrative exploration of complex regulatory dynamics in macaque brain tissue at single-cell resolution.



2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changlin Wan ◽  
Wennan Chang ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Fenil Shah ◽  
Xiaoyu Lu ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA key challenge in modeling single-cell RNA-seq (scRNA-seq) data is to capture the diverse gene expression states regulated by different transcriptional regulatory inputs across single cells, which is further complicated by a large number of observed zero and low expressions. We developed a left truncated mixture Gaussian (LTMG) model that stems from the kinetic relationships between the transcriptional regulatory inputs and metabolism of mRNA and gene expression abundance in a cell. LTMG infers the expression multi-modalities across single cell entities, representing a gene’s diverse expression states; meanwhile the dropouts and low expressions are treated as left truncated, specifically representing an expression state that is under suppression. We demonstrated that LTMG has significantly better goodness of fitting on an extensive number of single-cell data sets, comparing to three other state of the art models. In addition, our systems kinetic approach of handling the low and zero expressions and correctness of the identified multimodality are validated on several independent experimental data sets. Application on data of complex tissues demonstrated the capability of LTMG in extracting varied expression states specific to cell types or cell functions. Based on LTMG, a differential gene expression test and a co-regulation module identification method, namely LTMG-DGE and LTMG-GCR, are further developed. We experimentally validated that LTMG-DGE is equipped with higher sensitivity and specificity in detecting differentially expressed genes, compared with other five popular methods, and that LTMG-GCR is capable to retrieve the gene co-regulation modules corresponding to perturbed transcriptional regulations. A user-friendly R package with all the analysis power is available at https://github.com/zy26/LTMGSCA.



2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni Iacono ◽  
Elisabetta Mereu ◽  
Amy Guillaumet-Adkins ◽  
Roser Corominas ◽  
Ivon Cuscó ◽  
...  

AbstractSingle-cell RNA sequencing significantly deepened our insights into complex tissues and latest techniques are capable processing ten-thousands of cells simultaneously. With bigSCale, we provide an analytical framework being scalable to analyze millions of cells, addressing challenges of future large datasets. Unlike previous methods, bigSCale does not constrain data to fit an a priori-defined distribution and instead uses an accurate numerical model of noise. We evaluated the performance of bigSCale using a biological model of aberrant gene expression in patient derived neuronal progenitor cells and simulated datasets, which underlined its speed and accuracy in differential expression analysis. We further applied bigSCale to analyze 1.3 million cells from the mouse developing forebrain. Herein, we identified rare populations, such as Reelin positive Cajal-Retzius neurons, for which we determined a previously not recognized heterogeneity associated to distinct differentiation stages, spatial organization and cellular function. Together, bigSCale presents a perfect solution to address future challenges of large single-cell datasets.Extended AbstractSingle-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) significantly deepened our insights into complex tissues by providing high-resolution phenotypes for individual cells. Recent microfluidic-based methods are scalable to ten-thousands of cells, enabling an unbiased sampling and comprehensive characterization without prior knowledge. Increasing cell numbers, however, generates extremely big datasets, which extends processing time and challenges computing resources. Current scRNAseq analysis tools are not designed to analyze datasets larger than from thousands of cells and often lack sensitivity and specificity to identify marker genes for cell populations or experimental conditions. With bigSCale, we provide an analytical framework for the sensitive detection of population markers and differentially expressed genes, being scalable to analyze millions of single cells. Unlike other methods that use simple or mixture probabilistic models with negative binomial, gamma or Poisson distributions to handle the noise and sparsity of scRNAseq data, bigSCale does not constrain the data to fit an a priori-defined distribution. Instead, bigSCale uses large sample sizes to estimate a highly accurate and comprehensive numerical model of noise and gene expression. The framework further includes modules for differential expression (DE) analysis, cell clustering and population marker identification. Moreover, a directed convolution strategy allows processing of extremely large data sets, while preserving the transcript information from individual cells.We evaluate the performance of bigSCale using a biological model for reduced or elevated gene expression levels. Specifically, we perform scRNAseq of 1,920 patient derived neuronal progenitor cells from Williams-Beuren and 7q11.23 microduplication syndrome patients, harboring a deletion or duplication of 7q11.23, respectively. The affected region contains 28 genes whose transcriptional levels vary in line with their allele frequency. BigSCale detects expression changes with respect to cells from a healthy donor and outperforms other methods for single-cell DE analysis in sensitivity. Simulated data sets, underline the performance of bigSCale in DE analysis as it is faster and more sensitive and specific than other methods. The probabilistic model of cell-distances within bigSCale is further suitable for unsupervised clustering and the identification of cell types and subpopulations. Using bigSCale, we identify all major cell types of the somatosensory cortex and hippocampus analyzing 3,005 cells from adult mouse brains. Remarkably, we increase the number of cell population specific marker genes 4-6-fold compared to the original analysis and, moreover, define markers of higher order cell types. These include CD90 (Thy1), a neuronal surface receptor, potentially suitable for isolating intact neurons from complex brain samples.To test its applicability for large data sets, we apply bigSCale on scRNAseq data from 1.3 million cells derived from the pallium of the mouse developing forebrain (E18, 10x Genomics). Our directed down-sampling strategy accumulates transcript counts from cells with similar transcriptional profiles into index cell transcriptomes, thereby defining cellular clusters with improved resolution. Accordingly, index cell clusters provide a rich resource of marker genes for the main brain cell types and less frequent subpopulations. Our analysis of rare populations includes poorly characterized developmental cell types, such as neuron progenitors from the subventricular zone and neocortical Reelin positive neurons known as Cajal-Retzius (CR) cells. The latter represent a transient population which regulates the laminar formation of the developing neocortex and whose malfunctioning causes major neurodevelopmental disorders like autism or schizophrenia. Most importantly, index cell cluster can be deconvoluted to individual cell level for targeted analysis of populations of interest. Through decomposition of Reelin positive neurons, we determined a previously not recognized heterogeneity among CR cells, which we could associate to distinct differentiation stages as well as spatial and functional differences in the developing mouse brain. Specifically, subtypes of CR cells identified by bigSCale express different compositions of NMDA, AMPA and glycine receptor subunits, pointing to subpopulations with distinct membrane properties. Furthermore, we found Cxcl12, a chemokine secreted by the meninges and regulating the tangential migration of CR cells, to be also expressed in CR cells located in the marginal zone of the neocortex, indicating a self-regulated migration capacity.Together, bigSCale presents a perfect solution for the processing and analysis of scRNAseq data from millions of single cells. Its speed and sensitivity makes it suitable to the address future challenges of large single-cell data sets.



2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Clark ◽  
Ricard Argelaguet ◽  
Chantriolnt-Andreas Kapourani ◽  
Thomas M. Stubbs ◽  
Heather J. Lee ◽  
...  

AbstractParallel single-cell sequencing protocols represent powerful methods for investigating regulatory relationships, including epigenome-transcriptome interactions. Here, we report a novel single-cell method for parallel chromatin accessibility, DNA methylation and transcriptome profiling. scNMT-seq (single-cell nucleosome, methylation and transcription sequencing) uses a GpC methyltransferase to label open chromatin followed by bisulfite and RNA sequencing. We validate scNMT-seq by applying it to differentiating mouse embryonic stem cells, finding links between all three molecular layers and revealing dynamic coupling between epigenomic layers during differentiation.



Author(s):  
Ann Rose Bright ◽  
Siebe van Genesen ◽  
Qingqing Li ◽  
Simon J. van Heeringen ◽  
Alexia Grasso ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTDuring gastrulation, mesoderm is induced in pluripotent cells, concomitant with dorsal-ventral patterning and establishing of the dorsal axis. How transcription factors operate within the constraints of chromatin accessibility to mediate these processes is not well-understood. We applied chromatin accessibility and single cell transcriptome analyses to explore the emergence of heterogeneity and underlying gene-regulatory mechanisms during early gastrulation in Xenopus. ATAC-sequencing of pluripotent animal cap cells revealed a state of open chromatin of transcriptionally inactive lineage-restricted genes, whereas chromatin accessibility in dorsal marginal zone cells more closely reflected the transcriptional activity of genes. We characterized single cell trajectories in animal cap and dorsal marginal zone in early gastrula embryos, and inferred the activity of transcription factors in single cell clusters by integrating chromatin accessibility and single cell RNA-sequencing. We tested the activity of organizer-expressed transcription factors in mesoderm-competent animal cap cells and found combinatorial effects of these factors on organizer gene expression. In particular the combination of Foxb1 and Eomes induced a gene expression profile that mimicked those observed in head and trunk organizer single cell clusters. In addition, genes induced by Eomes, Otx2 or the Irx3-Otx2 combination, were enriched for promoters with maternally regulated H3K4me3 modifications, whereas promoters selectively induced by Lhx8 were marked more frequently by zygotically controlled H3K4me3. Our results show that combinatorial activity of zygotically expressed transcription factors acts on maternally-regulated accessible chromatin to induce organizer gene expression.



2019 ◽  
Vol 47 (18) ◽  
pp. e111-e111 ◽  
Author(s):  
Changlin Wan ◽  
Wennan Chang ◽  
Yu Zhang ◽  
Fenil Shah ◽  
Xiaoyu Lu ◽  
...  

Abstract A key challenge in modeling single-cell RNA-seq data is to capture the diversity of gene expression states regulated by different transcriptional regulatory inputs across individual cells, which is further complicated by largely observed zero and low expressions. We developed a left truncated mixture Gaussian (LTMG) model, from the kinetic relationships of the transcriptional regulatory inputs, mRNA metabolism and abundance in single cells. LTMG infers the expression multi-modalities across single cells, meanwhile, the dropouts and low expressions are treated as left truncated. We demonstrated that LTMG has significantly better goodness of fitting on an extensive number of scRNA-seq data, comparing to three other state-of-the-art models. Our biological assumption of the low non-zero expressions, rationality of the multimodality setting, and the capability of LTMG in extracting expression states specific to cell types or functions, are validated on independent experimental data sets. A differential gene expression test and a co-regulation module identification method are further developed. We experimentally validated that our differential expression test has higher sensitivity and specificity, compared with other five popular methods. The co-regulation analysis is capable of retrieving gene co-regulation modules corresponding to perturbed transcriptional regulations. A user-friendly R package with all the analysis power is available at https://github.com/zy26/LTMGSCA.



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