A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases: Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver

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A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases : Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver. / Cavalli, Marco; Diamanti, Klev; Pan, Gang; Spalinskas, Rapolas; Kumar, Chanchal; Deshmukh, Atul Shahaji; Mann, Matthias; Sahlén, Pelin; Komorowski, Jan; Wadelius, Claes.

In: O M I C S: A Journal of Integrative Biology, Vol. 24, No. 4, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cavalli, M, Diamanti, K, Pan, G, Spalinskas, R, Kumar, C, Deshmukh, AS, Mann, M, Sahlén, P, Komorowski, J & Wadelius, C 2020, 'A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases: Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver', O M I C S: A Journal of Integrative Biology, vol. 24, no. 4. https://doi.org/10.1089/omi.2019.0215

APA

Cavalli, M., Diamanti, K., Pan, G., Spalinskas, R., Kumar, C., Deshmukh, A. S., Mann, M., Sahlén, P., Komorowski, J., & Wadelius, C. (2020). A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases: Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver. O M I C S: A Journal of Integrative Biology, 24(4). https://doi.org/10.1089/omi.2019.0215

Vancouver

Cavalli M, Diamanti K, Pan G, Spalinskas R, Kumar C, Deshmukh AS et al. A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases: Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver. O M I C S: A Journal of Integrative Biology. 2020;24(4). https://doi.org/10.1089/omi.2019.0215

Author

Cavalli, Marco ; Diamanti, Klev ; Pan, Gang ; Spalinskas, Rapolas ; Kumar, Chanchal ; Deshmukh, Atul Shahaji ; Mann, Matthias ; Sahlén, Pelin ; Komorowski, Jan ; Wadelius, Claes. / A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases : Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver. In: O M I C S: A Journal of Integrative Biology. 2020 ; Vol. 24, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{a771893da77e4765b79b0420dfe16538,
title = "A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases: Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver",
abstract = "The liver is the largest solid organ and a primary metabolic hub. In recent years, intact cell nuclei were used to perform single-nuclei RNA-seq (snRNA-seq) for tissues difficult to dissociate and for flash-frozen archived tissue samples to discover unknown and rare cell subpopulations. In this study, we performed snRNA-seq of a liver sample to identify subpopulations of cells based on nuclear transcriptomics. In 4282 single nuclei, we detected, on average, 1377 active genes and we identified seven major cell types. We integrated data from 94,286 distal interactions (p < 0.05) for 7682 promoters from a targeted chromosome conformation capture technique (HiCap) and mass spectrometry proteomics for the same liver sample. We observed a reasonable correlation between proteomics and in silico bulk snRNA-seq (r = 0.47) using tissue-independent gene-specific protein abundancy estimation factors. We specifically looked at genes of medical importance. The DPYD gene is involved in the pharmacogenetics of fluoropyrimidine toxicity and some of its variants are analyzed for clinical purposes. We identified a new putative polymorphic regulatory element, which may contribute to variation in toxicity. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common type of primary liver cancer and we investigated all known risk genes. We identified a complex regulatory landscape for the SLC2A2 gene with 16 candidate enhancers. Three of them harbor somatic motif breaking and other mutations in HCC in the Pan Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes dataset and are candidates to contribute to malignancy. Our results highlight the potential of a multi-omics approach in the study of human diseases.",
author = "Marco Cavalli and Klev Diamanti and Gang Pan and Rapolas Spalinskas and Chanchal Kumar and Deshmukh, {Atul Shahaji} and Matthias Mann and Pelin Sahl{\'e}n and Jan Komorowski and Claes Wadelius",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1089/omi.2019.0215",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
journal = "OMICS A Journal of Integrative Biology",
issn = "1536-2310",
publisher = "Mary Ann/Liebert, Inc. Publishers",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Multi-Omics Approach to Liver Diseases

T2 - Integration of Single Nuclei Transcriptomics with Proteomics and HiCap Bulk Data in Human Liver

AU - Cavalli, Marco

AU - Diamanti, Klev

AU - Pan, Gang

AU - Spalinskas, Rapolas

AU - Kumar, Chanchal

AU - Deshmukh, Atul Shahaji

AU - Mann, Matthias

AU - Sahlén, Pelin

AU - Komorowski, Jan

AU - Wadelius, Claes

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - The liver is the largest solid organ and a primary metabolic hub. In recent years, intact cell nuclei were used to perform single-nuclei RNA-seq (snRNA-seq) for tissues difficult to dissociate and for flash-frozen archived tissue samples to discover unknown and rare cell subpopulations. In this study, we performed snRNA-seq of a liver sample to identify subpopulations of cells based on nuclear transcriptomics. In 4282 single nuclei, we detected, on average, 1377 active genes and we identified seven major cell types. We integrated data from 94,286 distal interactions (p < 0.05) for 7682 promoters from a targeted chromosome conformation capture technique (HiCap) and mass spectrometry proteomics for the same liver sample. We observed a reasonable correlation between proteomics and in silico bulk snRNA-seq (r = 0.47) using tissue-independent gene-specific protein abundancy estimation factors. We specifically looked at genes of medical importance. The DPYD gene is involved in the pharmacogenetics of fluoropyrimidine toxicity and some of its variants are analyzed for clinical purposes. We identified a new putative polymorphic regulatory element, which may contribute to variation in toxicity. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common type of primary liver cancer and we investigated all known risk genes. We identified a complex regulatory landscape for the SLC2A2 gene with 16 candidate enhancers. Three of them harbor somatic motif breaking and other mutations in HCC in the Pan Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes dataset and are candidates to contribute to malignancy. Our results highlight the potential of a multi-omics approach in the study of human diseases.

AB - The liver is the largest solid organ and a primary metabolic hub. In recent years, intact cell nuclei were used to perform single-nuclei RNA-seq (snRNA-seq) for tissues difficult to dissociate and for flash-frozen archived tissue samples to discover unknown and rare cell subpopulations. In this study, we performed snRNA-seq of a liver sample to identify subpopulations of cells based on nuclear transcriptomics. In 4282 single nuclei, we detected, on average, 1377 active genes and we identified seven major cell types. We integrated data from 94,286 distal interactions (p < 0.05) for 7682 promoters from a targeted chromosome conformation capture technique (HiCap) and mass spectrometry proteomics for the same liver sample. We observed a reasonable correlation between proteomics and in silico bulk snRNA-seq (r = 0.47) using tissue-independent gene-specific protein abundancy estimation factors. We specifically looked at genes of medical importance. The DPYD gene is involved in the pharmacogenetics of fluoropyrimidine toxicity and some of its variants are analyzed for clinical purposes. We identified a new putative polymorphic regulatory element, which may contribute to variation in toxicity. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most common type of primary liver cancer and we investigated all known risk genes. We identified a complex regulatory landscape for the SLC2A2 gene with 16 candidate enhancers. Three of them harbor somatic motif breaking and other mutations in HCC in the Pan Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes dataset and are candidates to contribute to malignancy. Our results highlight the potential of a multi-omics approach in the study of human diseases.

U2 - 10.1089/omi.2019.0215

DO - 10.1089/omi.2019.0215

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 32181701

VL - 24

JO - OMICS A Journal of Integrative Biology

JF - OMICS A Journal of Integrative Biology

SN - 1536-2310

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 239205705