Project description:The recent development of spatial omics enables single-cell profiling of the transcriptome and the 3D organization of the genome in a spatially resolved manner. A spatial epigenomics method would expand the repertoire of spatial omics tools and accelerate our understanding of the spatial regulation of cellular processes and tissue functions. Here, we developed an imaging approach for spatially resolved profiling of epigenetic modifications in single cells
Project description:Understanding the spatial distribution of T cells is pivotal to decrypting immune dysfunction in cancer. Current spatially resolved transcriptomics fall short in directly annotating T cell receptors (TCRs), limiting the comprehension of anti-cancer immunity. We introduce a novel technology, Spatially Resolved T Cell Receptor Sequencing (SPTCR-seq), integrating target enrichment and long-read sequencing for highly sensitive TCR sequencing. This approach yields an on-target rate of ~85%, and via a bespoke computational pipeline, it provides meticulous spatial mapping, error correction, and UMI refinement. SPTCR-seq outperforms PCR-based methods, offering superior reconstruction of the complete TCR architecture, inclusive of V, D, J regions and the vital complementarity-determining region 3 (CDR3). Applying SPTCR-seq, we reveal local T cell diversity, clonal expansion, and transcriptional evolution across spatially distinct niches in glioblastoma, identifying critical involvement of NK and B cells in spatial T cell adaptation. SPTCR-seq, by bridging spatially resolved omics and TCR sequencing, stands as a robust tool for exploring T cell dysfunction in cancers and beyond.
Project description:Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive lung disease with poor prognosis and limited treatment options. Efforts to identify effective treatments are thwarted by limited understanding of IPF pathogenesis and poor translatability of available preclinical models. To address these limitations, we generated spatially resolved transcriptome maps of human IPF and bleomycin-induced mouse lung fibrosis.
Project description:Allelic differences between the two sets of chromosomes can affect the propensity of inheritance in humans, but the extent of such differences in the human genome has yet to be fully explored. Here, we delineate allelic chromatin modifications and transcriptomes amongst a broad set of human tissues, enabled by a chromosome-span haplotype reconstruction strategy1. The resulting haplotype-resolved epigenomic maps reveal extensive allele bias in the transcription of human genes as well as chromatin state, allowing us to infer cis-regulatory relationships between genes and their control sequences. These maps also uncover a new class of cis regulatory elements and detail activities of repetitive elements in various human tissues. The rich datasets described here will enhance our understanding of the mechanisms controlling tissue-specific gene expression programs. One replicate of Hi-C experiment in four human tissues with four different individuals (Thymus STL001, Aorta STL002, Leftventricle STL003, and Liver STL011).
Project description:We investigated spatiotemporal molecular patterns related to AD pathophsiology using spatially resolved transcriptome of the AD mouse model. The late change of gray matters of AD was commonly related to neuroinflammation, while the early change in the white matter of AD represented neuronal projection and ensheathment of axons before the amyloid plaques accumulation. Disease-associated microglia and astrocyte signatures were spatially differently enriched. Our results provide a key spatiotemporally heterogeneous molecular change particularly related to inflammation in AD.
Project description:Spatial omics emerged as a new frontier of biological and biomedical research. Here, we present spatial-CUT&Tag for spatially resolved genome-wide profiling of histone modifications by combining in situ CUT&Tag chemistry, microfluidic deterministic barcoding, and next-generation sequencing. Spatially resolved chromatin states in mouse embryos revealed tissue-type-specific epigenetic regulations in concordance with ENCODE references and provide spatial information at tissue scale. Spatial-CUT&Tag revealed epigenetic control of the cortical layer development and spatial patterning of cell types determined by histone modification in mouse brain. Single-cell epigenomes can be derived in situ by identifying 20-micrometer pixels containing only one nucleus using immunofluorescence imaging. Spatial chromatin modification profiling in tissue may offer new opportunities to study epigenetic regulation, cell function, and fate decision in normal physiology and pathogenesis.