Circle‐Seq reveals genomic and disease‐specific hallmarks in urinary cell‐free extrachromosomal circular DNAs

Wei Lv(Zhejiang Cancer Hospital), Xiaoguang Pan, Peng Han(University of Copenhagen), Ziyu Wang(Qingdao University), Weijia Feng(University of Copenhagen), Xue Xing(Tongji Hospital), Qingqing Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Kunli Qu(University of Copenhagen), Yuchen Zeng(Tianjin University), Cailin Zhang(Tongji Hospital), Zhe Xu(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yi Li(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tianyu Zheng(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Ling Lin(Steno Diabetes Centers), Chengxun Liu(University of Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xuemei Liu, Hanbo Li, Rasmus Amund Henriksen(University of Copenhagen), Lars Bolund(BGI Group (China)), Lin Lin(Steno Diabetes Centers), Xin Jin(BGI Group (China)), Huanming Yang(BGI Group (China)), Xiuqing Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Tailang Yin(Wuhan University), Birgitte Regenberg(University of Copenhagen), Fan He(Tongji Hospital), Yonglun Luo(BGI Group (China))
Clinical and Translational Medicine
April 1, 2022
Cited by 87Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Extrachromosomal circular deoxyribonucleic acid (eccDNA) is evolving as a valuable biomarker, while little is known about its presence in urine. METHODS: Here, we report the discovery and analysis of urinary cell-free eccDNAs (ucf-eccDNAs) in healthy controls and patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) by Circle-Seq. RESULTS: Millions of unique ucf-eccDNAs were identified and comprehensively characterised. The ucf-eccDNAs are GC-rich. Most ucf-eccDNAs are less than 1000 bp and are enriched in four pronounced peaks at 207, 358, 553 and 732 bp. Analysis of the genomic distribution of ucf-eccDNAs shows that eccDNAs are found on all chromosomes but enriched on chromosomes 17, 19 and 20 with a high density of protein-coding genes, CpG islands, short interspersed transposable elements (SINEs) and simple repeat elements. Analysis of eccDNA junction sequences further suggests that microhomology and palindromic repeats might be involved in eccDNA formation. The ucf-eccDNAs in CKD patients are significantly higher than those in healthy controls. Moreover, eccDNA with miRNA genes is highly enriched in CKD ucf-eccDNA. CONCLUSIONS: This work discovers and provides the first deep characterisation of ucf-eccDNAs and suggests ucf-eccDNA as a valuable noninnvasive biomarker for urogenital disorder diagnosis and monitoring.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis