Department of Biological Science, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida, United States of America.
PLoS Comput Biol. 2011 Oct;7(10):e1002225. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002225. Epub 2011 Oct 20.
Many types of epigenetic profiling have been used to classify stem cells, stages of cellular differentiation, and cancer subtypes. Existing methods focus on local chromatin features such as DNA methylation and histone modifications that require extensive analysis for genome-wide coverage. Replication timing has emerged as a highly stable cell type-specific epigenetic feature that is regulated at the megabase-level and is easily and comprehensively analyzed genome-wide. Here, we describe a cell classification method using 67 individual replication profiles from 34 mouse and human cell lines and stem cell-derived tissues, including new data for mesendoderm, definitive endoderm, mesoderm and smooth muscle. Using a Monte-Carlo approach for selecting features of replication profiles conserved in each cell type, we identify "replication timing fingerprints" unique to each cell type and apply a k nearest neighbor approach to predict known and unknown cell types. Our method correctly classifies 67/67 independent replication-timing profiles, including those derived from closely related intermediate stages. We also apply this method to derive fingerprints for pluripotency in human and mouse cells. Interestingly, the mouse pluripotency fingerprint overlaps almost completely with previously identified genomic segments that switch from early to late replication as pluripotency is lost. Thereafter, replication timing and transcription within these regions become difficult to reprogram back to pluripotency, suggesting these regions highlight an epigenetic barrier to reprogramming. In addition, the major histone cluster Hist1 consistently becomes later replicating in committed cell types, and several histone H1 genes in this cluster are downregulated during differentiation, suggesting a possible instrument for the chromatin compaction observed during differentiation. Finally, we demonstrate that unknown samples can be classified independently using site-specific PCR against fingerprint regions. In sum, replication fingerprints provide a comprehensive means for cell characterization and are a promising tool for identifying regions with cell type-specific organization.
许多类型的表观遗传分析方法被用于对干细胞、细胞分化阶段和癌症亚型进行分类。现有的方法主要关注局部染色质特征,如 DNA 甲基化和组蛋白修饰,这些特征需要进行广泛的分析才能覆盖全基因组。复制时相已经成为一种高度稳定的细胞类型特异性表观遗传特征,在兆碱基水平上受到调控,并且可以方便且全面地进行全基因组分析。在这里,我们描述了一种使用 34 种小鼠和人类细胞系和干细胞衍生组织的 67 个个体复制图谱的细胞分类方法,其中包括中胚层、原肠胚、中胚层和平滑肌的新数据。我们使用蒙特卡罗方法选择在每种细胞类型中保守的复制图谱特征,确定每个细胞类型特有的“复制时相指纹”,并应用 k 最近邻方法来预测已知和未知的细胞类型。我们的方法正确地对 67/67 个独立的复制时相图谱进行分类,包括那些来自密切相关的中间阶段的图谱。我们还应用这种方法来得出人类和小鼠细胞多能性的指纹。有趣的是,小鼠多能性指纹与之前确定的基因组片段几乎完全重叠,这些片段随着多能性的丧失而从早期复制转变为晚期复制。此后,这些区域内的复制时相和转录变得难以重新编程为多能性,这表明这些区域突出了重新编程的表观遗传障碍。此外,在分化过程中,主要的组蛋白簇 Hist1 始终变得复制较晚,并且该簇中的几个组蛋白 H1 基因在分化过程中下调,这表明组蛋白 H1 可能是分化过程中观察到的染色质紧缩的一个工具。最后,我们证明可以使用针对指纹区域的特定位点 PCR 独立地对未知样本进行分类。总之,复制指纹为细胞特征提供了一种全面的方法,是识别具有细胞类型特异性组织的有前途的工具。