Project description:Natural mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation plays a fundamental role in human disease and enables the clonal tracing of native human cells. While various genotyping approaches revealed mutational heterogeneity in human tissues and single cells, current methodologies are limited by scale. Here, we introduce a high-throughput, droplet-based mitochondrial single-cell Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin with sequencing (mtscATAC-seq) protocol and computational framework that facilitate high-confidence mtDNA mutation calling in thousands of single cells. Further, the concomitant high-quality accessible chromatin readout enables the paired inference of individual cell mtDNA heteroplasmy, clonal lineage, cell state, and accessible chromatin regulatory features. Our multi-omic analyses reveals single-cell variation in heteroplasmy of a pathologic mtDNA variant (m.8344A>G), which we tie to intra-individual chromatin variability and clonal evolution. Further, using somatic mtDNA mutations, we clonally trace thousands of hematopoietic cells in vitro and in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, linking epigenomic variability to subclonal evolution in vivo.
Project description:Natural mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation plays a fundamental role in human disease and enables the clonal tracing of native human cells. While various genotyping approaches revealed mutational heterogeneity in human tissues and single cells, current methodologies are limited by scale. Here, we introduce a high-throughput, droplet-based mitochondrial single-cell Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin with sequencing (mtscATAC-seq) protocol and computational framework that facilitate high-confidence mtDNA mutation calling in thousands of single cells. Further, the concomitant high-quality accessible chromatin readout enables the paired inference of individual cell mtDNA heteroplasmy, clonal lineage, cell state, and accessible chromatin regulatory features. Our multi-omic analyses reveals single-cell variation in heteroplasmy of a pathologic mtDNA variant (m.8344A>G), which we tie to intra-individual chromatin variability and clonal evolution. Further, using somatic mtDNA mutations, we clonally trace thousands of hematopoietic cells in vitro and in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, linking epigenomic variability to subclonal evolution in vivo.
Project description:Natural mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation plays a fundamental role in human disease and enables the clonal tracing of native human cells. While various genotyping approaches revealed mutational heterogeneity in human tissues and single cells, current methodologies are limited by scale. Here, we introduce a high-throughput, droplet-based mitochondrial single-cell Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin with sequencing (mtscATAC-seq) protocol and computational framework that facilitate high-confidence mtDNA mutation calling in thousands of single cells. Further, the concomitant high-quality accessible chromatin readout enables the paired inference of individual cell mtDNA heteroplasmy, clonal lineage, cell state, and accessible chromatin regulatory features. Our multi-omic analyses reveals single-cell variation in heteroplasmy of a pathologic mtDNA variant (m.8344A>G), which we tie to intra-individual chromatin variability and clonal evolution. Further, using somatic mtDNA mutations, we clonally trace thousands of hematopoietic cells in vitro and in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, linking epigenomic variability to subclonal evolution in vivo.
Project description:Natural mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation plays a fundamental role in human disease and enables the clonal tracing of native human cells. While various genotyping approaches revealed mutational heterogeneity in human tissues and single cells, current methodologies are limited by scale. Here, we introduce a high-throughput, droplet-based mitochondrial single-cell Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin with sequencing (mtscATAC-seq) protocol and computational framework that facilitate high-confidence mtDNA mutation calling in thousands of single cells. Further, the concomitant high-quality accessible chromatin readout enables the paired inference of individual cell mtDNA heteroplasmy, clonal lineage, cell state, and accessible chromatin regulatory features. Our multi-omic analyses reveals single-cell variation in heteroplasmy of a pathologic mtDNA variant (m.8344A>G), which we tie to intra-individual chromatin variability and clonal evolution. Further, using somatic mtDNA mutations, we clonally trace thousands of hematopoietic cells in vitro and in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, linking epigenomic variability to subclonal evolution in vivo.
Project description:Natural mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation plays a fundamental role in human disease and enables the clonal tracing of native human cells. While various genotyping approaches revealed mutational heterogeneity in human tissues and single cells, current methodologies are limited by scale. Here, we introduce a high-throughput, droplet-based mitochondrial single-cell Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin with sequencing (mtscATAC-seq) protocol and computational framework that facilitate high-confidence mtDNA mutation calling in thousands of single cells. Further, the concomitant high-quality accessible chromatin readout enables the paired inference of individual cell mtDNA heteroplasmy, clonal lineage, cell state, and accessible chromatin regulatory features. Our multi-omic analyses reveals single-cell variation in heteroplasmy of a pathologic mtDNA variant (m.8344A>G), which we tie to intra-individual chromatin variability and clonal evolution. Further, using somatic mtDNA mutations, we clonally trace thousands of hematopoietic cells in vitro and in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, linking epigenomic variability to subclonal evolution in vivo.
Project description:Natural mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation plays a fundamental role in human disease and enables the clonal tracing of native human cells. While various genotyping approaches revealed mutational heterogeneity in human tissues and single cells, current methodologies are limited by scale. Here, we introduce a high-throughput, droplet-based mitochondrial single-cell Assay for Transposase Accessible Chromatin with sequencing (mtscATAC-seq) protocol and computational framework that facilitate high-confidence mtDNA mutation calling in thousands of single cells. Further, the concomitant high-quality accessible chromatin readout enables the paired inference of individual cell mtDNA heteroplasmy, clonal lineage, cell state, and accessible chromatin regulatory features. Our multi-omic analyses reveals single-cell variation in heteroplasmy of a pathologic mtDNA variant (m.8344A>G), which we tie to intra-individual chromatin variability and clonal evolution. Further, using somatic mtDNA mutations, we clonally trace thousands of hematopoietic cells in vitro and in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, linking epigenomic variability to subclonal evolution in vivo.
Project description:Lineage tracing provides unprecedented insights into the fate of individual cells and their progeny in complex organisms. While effective genetic approaches have been developed in vitro and in animal models, these cannot be used to interrogate human physiology in vivo. Instead, naturally occurring somatic mutations have been utilized to infer clonality and lineal relationships between cells in human tissues, but current approaches are limited by high error rates and scale, and provide little information about the state or function of the cells. Here, we show how somatic mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) can be tracked by current single cell RNA-Seq (scRNA-Seq) or single cell ATAC-Seq (scATAC-Seq) for simultaneous analysis of single cell lineage and state. We leverage somatic mtDNA mutations as natural genetic barcodes and demonstrate their use as clonal markers to infer lineal relationships. We trace the lineage of human cells by somatic mtDNA mutations in a native context both in vitro and in vivo, and relate it to expression profiles and chromatin accessibility. Our approach should allow lineage tracing at a 100- to 1,000-fold greater scale than with single cell whole genome sequencing, while providing information on cell state, opening the way to chart detailed cell lineage and fate maps in human health and disease. A variety of experimental designs using cells derived from both in vitro and in vivo to determine the efficacy of using mtDNA mutations in human clonal tracing.
Project description:Lineage tracing provides unprecedented insights into the fate of individual cells and their progeny in complex organisms. While effective genetic approaches have been developed in vitro and in animal models, these cannot be used to interrogate human physiology in vivo. Instead, naturally occurring somatic mutations have been utilized to infer clonality and lineal relationships between cells in human tissues, but current approaches are limited by high error rates and scale, and provide little information about the state or function of the cells. Here, we show how somatic mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) can be tracked by current single cell RNA-Seq (scRNA-Seq) or single cell ATAC-Seq (scATAC-Seq) for simultaneous analysis of single cell lineage and state. We leverage somatic mtDNA mutations as natural genetic barcodes and demonstrate their use as clonal markers to infer lineal relationships. We trace the lineage of human cells by somatic mtDNA mutations in a native context both in vitro and in vivo, and relate it to expression profiles and chromatin accessibility. Our approach should allow lineage tracing at a 100- to 1,000-fold greater scale than with single cell whole genome sequencing, while providing information on cell state, opening the way to chart detailed cell lineage and fate maps in human health and disease. A variety of experimental designs using cells derived from both in vitro and in vivo to determine the efficacy of using mtDNA mutations in human clonal tracing.