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Single-cell chromatin accessibility landscape of human umbilical cord blood in trisomy 18 syndrome

Authors :
Xiaofen Qiu
Haiyan Yu
Hongwei Wu
Zhiyang Hu
Jun Zhou
Hua Lin
Wen Xue
Wanxia Cai
Jiejing Chen
Qiang Yan
Weier Dai
Ming Yang
Donge Tang
Yong Dai
Source :
Human Genomics, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMC, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Background Trisomy 18 syndrome (Edwards syndrome, ES) is a type of aneuploidy caused by the presence of an extra chromosome 18. Aneuploidy is the leading cause of early pregnancy loss, intellectual disability, and multiple congenital anomalies. The research of trisomy 18 is progressing slowly, and the molecular characteristics of the disease mechanism and phenotype are still largely unclear. Results In this study, we used the commercial Chromium platform (10× Genomics) to perform sc-ATAC-seq to measure chromatin accessibility in 11,611 single umbilical cord blood cells derived from one trisomy 18 syndrome patient and one healthy donor. We obtained 13 distinct major clusters of cells and identified them as 6 human umbilical cord blood mononuclear cell types using analysis tool. Compared with the NC group, the ES group had a lower ratio of T cells to NK cells, the ratio of monocytes/DC cell population did not change significantly, and the ratio of B cell nuclear progenitor and megakaryocyte erythroid cells was higher. The differential genes of ME-0 are enriched in Human T cell leukemia virus 1 infection pathway, and the differential peak genes of ME-1 are enriched in apopotosis pathway. We found that CCNB2 and MCM3 may be vital to the development of trisomy 18. CCNB2 and MCM3, which have been reported to be essential components of the cell cycle and chromatin. Conclusions We have identified 6 cell populations in cord blood. Disorder in megakaryocyte erythroid cells implicates trisomy 18 in perturbing fetal hematopoiesis. We identified a pathway in which the master differential regulatory pathway in the ME-0 cell population involves human T cell leukemia virus 1 infection, a pathway that is dysregulated in patients with trisomy 18 and which may increase the risk of leukemia in patients with trisomy 18. CCNB2 and MCM3 in progenitor may be vital to the development of trisomy 18. CCNB2 and MCM3, which have been reported to be essential components of the cell cycle and chromatin, may be related to chromosomal abnormalities in trisomy 18.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14797364
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Human Genomics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.54af4f56b20b4021aad75af73dfeaa72
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40246-021-00338-z