| Literature DB >> 36138229 |
Anna S Nam1,2, Neville Dusaj2,3,4, Franco Izzo2,3, Rekha Murali2,3, Robert M Myers2,3,4, Tarek H Mouhieddine5, Jesus Sotelo2,3, Salima Benbarche6, Michael Waarts6, Federico Gaiti2,3, Sabrin Tahri5, Ross Levine6, Omar Abdel-Wahab6, Lucy A Godley7, Ronan Chaligne2,3, Irene Ghobrial8, Dan A Landau9,10,11.
Abstract
Somatic mutations in cancer genes have been detected in clonal expansions across healthy human tissue, including in clonal hematopoiesis. However, because mutated and wild-type cells are admixed, we have limited ability to link genotypes with phenotypes. To overcome this limitation, we leveraged multi-modality single-cell sequencing, capturing genotype, transcriptomes and methylomes in progenitors from individuals with DNMT3A R882 mutated clonal hematopoiesis. DNMT3A mutations result in myeloid over lymphoid bias, and an expansion of immature myeloid progenitors primed toward megakaryocytic-erythroid fate, with dysregulated expression of lineage and leukemia stem cell markers. Mutated DNMT3A leads to preferential hypomethylation of polycomb repressive complex 2 targets and a specific CpG flanking motif. Notably, the hypomethylation motif is enriched in binding motifs of key hematopoietic transcription factors, serving as a potential mechanistic link between DNMT3A mutations and aberrant transcriptional phenotypes. Thus, single-cell multi-omics paves the road to defining the downstream consequences of mutations that drive clonal mosaicism.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36138229 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-022-01179-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 41.307