Single-cell multi-omics map of human fetal blood in Down syndrome
Summary
Down syndrome predisposes individuals to haematological abnormalities, such as increased number of erythrocytes and leukaemia in a process that is initiated before birth and is not entirely understood1-3. Here, to understand dysregulated haematopoiesis in Down syndrome, we integrated single-cell transcriptomics of over 1.1 million cells with chromatin accessibility and spatial transcriptomics datasets using human fetal liver and bone marrow samples from 3 fetuses with disomy and 15 fetuses with trisomy. We found that differences in gene expression in Down syndrome were dependent on both cell type and environment. Furthermore, we found multiple lines of evidence that haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in Down syndrome are 'primed' to differentiate. We subsequently established a Down syndrome-specific map linking non-coding elements to genes in disomic and trisomic HSCs using 10X multiome data. By integrating this map with genetic variants associated with blood cell counts, we discovered that trisomy restructured regulatory interactions to dysregulate enhancer activity and gene expression critical to erythroid lineage differentiation. Furthermore, as mutations in Down syndrome display a signature of oxidative stress4,5, we validated both increased mitochondrial mass and oxidative stress in Down syndrome, and observed that these mutations preferentially fell into regulatory regions of expressed genes in HSCs. Together, our single-cell, multi-omic resource provides a high-resolution molecular map of fetal haematopoiesis in Down syndrome and indicates significant regulatory restructuring giving rise to co-occurring haematological conditions.
Overall design
Here, we performed single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) of human fetal liver and bone marrow tissue samples from 15 trisomy 21 (Ts21) and 3 healthy foetuses (median age 14 post-conception weeks). The data set is composed of approximately 1.1 million cells from three different populations: CD235- (niche and haematopoietic cells depleted of erythrocytes), CD34+/Lin- (haematopoietic progenitors), and CD45+ (all haematopoietic cells).
Contributors
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Contact
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