2025-02-05T16:17:45Z
2025-02-05T16:17:45Z
2023-01-17
2025-02-05T16:17:45Z
Long-range interactions between regulatory elements and promoters are key in gene transcriptional control; however, their study requires large amounts of starting material, which is not compatible with clinical scenarios nor the study of rare cell populations. Here we introduce low input capture Hi-C (liCHi-C) as a cost-effective, flexible method to map and robustly compare promoter interactomes at high resolution. As proof of its broad applicability, we implement liCHi-C to study normal and malignant human hematopoietic hierarchy in clinical samples. We demonstrate that the dynamic promoter architecture identifies developmental trajectories and orchestrates transcriptional transitions during cell-state commitment. Moreover, liCHi-C enables the identification of disease-relevant cell types, genes and pathways potentially deregulated by non-coding alterations at distal regulatory elements. Finally, we show that liCHi-C can be harnessed to uncover genome-wide structural variants, resolve their breakpoints and infer their pathogenic effects. Collectively, our optimized liCHi-C method expands the study of 3D chromatin organization to unique, low-abundance cell populations, and offers an opportunity to uncover factors and regulatory networks involved in disease pathogenesis.
Article
Published version
English
Expressió gènica; Genoma humà; Cromatina; Transcripció genètica; Gene expression; Human genome; Chromatin; Genetic transcription
Nature Publishing Group
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-35911-8
Nature Communications, 2023, vol. 14
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-35911-8
cc-by (c) Tomás-Daza, L. et al., 2023
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/