Concurrent Single-Cell RNA and Targeted DNA Sequencing on an Automated Platform for Comeasurement of Genomic and Transcriptomic Signatures

Say Li Kong(Genome Institute of Singapore), Huipeng Li(Genome Institute of Singapore), Joyce A. Tai(Genome Institute of Singapore), Elise T. Courtois(Jackson Laboratory), Huay Mei Poh(Genome Institute of Singapore), Dawn Pingxi Lau(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Yu Xuan Haw(Genome Institute of Singapore), N. Gopalakrishna Iyer(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Daniel S.W. Tan(National Cancer Centre Singapore), Shyam Prabhakar(Genome Institute of Singapore), Dave Ruff(Mission Bio (United States)), Axel M. Hillmer(University Hospital Cologne)
Clinical Chemistry
December 6, 2018
Cited by 40Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND The comeasurement of both genomic and transcriptomic signatures in single cells is of fundamental importance to accurately assess how the genetic information correlates with the transcriptomic phenotype. However, existing technologies have low throughput and laborious work flows. METHODS We developed a new method for concurrent sequencing of the transcriptome and targeted genomic regions (CORTAD-seq) within the same single cell on an automated microfluidic platform. The method was compatible with the downstream library preparation, allowing easy integration into existing next-generation sequencing work flows. We incorporated a single-cell bioinformatics pipeline for transcriptome and mutation analysis. RESULTS As proof of principle, we applied CORTAD-seq to lung cancer cell lines to dissect the cellular consequences of mutations that result in resistance to targeted therapy. We obtained a mean detection of 6000 expressed genes and an exonic rate of 50%. The targeted DNA-sequencing data achieved a 97.8% detection rate for mutations and allowed for the identification of copy number variations and haplotype construction. We detected expression signatures of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) resistance, epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) amplification, and expansion of the T790M mutation among resistant cells. We also identified characteristics for TKI resistance that were independent of EGFR T790M, indicating that other alterations are required for resistance in this context. CONCLUSIONS CORTAD-seq allows assessment of the interconnection between genetic and transcriptomic changes in single cells. It is operated on an automated, commercially available single-cell isolation platform, making its implementation straightforward.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis