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Mulqueen RM, Pokholok D, O’Connell BL, Thornton CA, Zhang F, O’Roak BJ, Link J, Yardımcı GG, Sears RC, Steemers FJ, Adey AC. High-content single-cell combinatorial indexing. Nat Biotechnol 2021; 39:1574-1580. [PMID: 34226710 PMCID: PMC8678206 DOI: 10.1038/s41587-021-00962-z] [Citation(s) in RCA: 34] [Impact Index Per Article: 11.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Download PDF] [Figures] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 01/08/2021] [Accepted: 05/20/2021] [Indexed: 02/06/2023]
Abstract
Single-cell combinatorial indexing (sci) with transposase-based library construction increases the throughput of single-cell genomics assays but produces sparse coverage in terms of usable reads per cell. We develop symmetrical strand sci ('s3'), a uracil-based adapter switching approach that improves the rate of conversion of source DNA into viable sequencing library fragments following tagmentation. We apply this chemistry to assay chromatin accessibility (s3-assay for transposase-accessible chromatin, s3-ATAC) in human cortical and mouse whole-brain tissues, with mouse datasets demonstrating a six- to 13-fold improvement in usable reads per cell compared with other available methods. Application of s3 to single-cell whole-genome sequencing (s3-WGS) and to whole-genome plus chromatin conformation (s3-GCC) yields 148- and 14.8-fold improvements, respectively, in usable reads per cell compared with sci-DNA-sequencing and sci-HiC. We show that s3-WGS and s3-GCC resolve subclonal genomic alterations in patient-derived pancreatic cancer cell lines. We expect that the s3 platform will be compatible with other transposase-based techniques, including sci-MET or CUT&Tag.
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Affiliation(s)
- Ryan M. Mulqueen
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR
| | | | - Brendan L. O’Connell
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR
| | - Casey A. Thornton
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR
| | | | - Brian J. O’Roak
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR
| | - Jason Link
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Knight Cancer Institute, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Brendan Colson Center for Pancreatic Care, Portland, OR
| | - Galip Gürkan Yardımcı
- Oregon Health & Science University, Knight Cancer Institute, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research Center, Portland, OR
| | - Rosalie C. Sears
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Knight Cancer Institute, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Brendan Colson Center for Pancreatic Care, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research Center, Portland, OR
| | | | - Andrew C. Adey
- Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Molecular and Medical Genetics, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Knight Cancer Institute, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Cancer Early Detection Advanced Research Center, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Department of Oncological Sciences, Portland, OR,Oregon Health & Science University, Knight Cardiovascular Institute, Portland, OR,Correspondence to
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