Accurately quantifying the functional consequences of non-coding mosaic variants requires the pairing of DNA sequence with both accessible and closed chromatin architectures along individual DNA molecules-a pairing that cannot be achieved using traditional fragmentation-based chromatin assays. We demonstrate that targeted single-molecule chromatin fiber sequencing (Fiber-seq) achieves this, permitting single-molecule, long-read genomic and epigenomic profiling across targeted >100 kilobase loci with ~10-fold enrichment over untargeted sequencing. Targeted Fiber-seq reveals that pathogenic expansions of the CTG repeat that underlie Myotonic Dystrophy 1 are characterized by somatic instability and disruption of multiple nearby regulatory elements, both of which are repeat length-dependent. Furthermore, we reveal that therapeutic adenine base editing of the segmentally duplicated γ-globin (/) promoters in primary human hematopoietic cells induced towards an erythroblast lineage increases the accessibility of the promoter as well as neighboring regulatory elements. Overall, we find that these non-protein coding mosaic variants can have complex impacts on chromatin architectures, including extending beyond the regulatory element harboring the variant.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11257596 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.09.602608 | DOI Listing |
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