Mapping single-cell diploid chromatin fiber architectures using DAF-seq

  • Elliott G. Swanson
  • , Yizi Mao
  • , Benjamin J. Mallory
  • , Mitchell R. Vollger
  • , Stephanie C. Bohaczuk
  • , Christopher B. Oliveira
  • , Daniel B. Lyon
  • , Jane Ranchalis
  • , Nancy L. Parmalee
  • , Barak A. Cohen
  • , James T. Bennett
  • , Andrew B. Stergachis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Gene regulation is orchestrated by the co-binding of proteins along chromosome-length chromatin fibers within single cells, yet the heterogeneity of this occupancy between haplotypes and cells remains poorly resolved in diploid organisms. Here we present Deaminase-Assisted single-molecule chromatin Fiber sequencing (DAF-seq), which enables single-molecule footprinting at near-nucleotide resolution while synchronously profiling single-molecule chromatin states and DNA sequence. DAF-seq illuminates cooperative protein occupancy at individual regulatory elements and resolves the functional impact of somatic variants and rare chromatin epialleles. Single-cell DAF-seq (scDAF-seq) generates chromosome-length protein co-occupancy maps across 99% of each individual cell’s mappable genome. scDAF-seq uncovers extensive chromatin plasticity both within and between single diploid cells, with chromatin actuation diverging by 61% between haplotypes within a cell, and 63% between cells. Moreover, we find that regulatory elements are preferentially co-actuated along the same fiber in a distance-dependent manner that mirrors cohesin-mediated loops. Overall, DAF-seq enables the characterization of protein occupancy across entire chromosomes with single-nucleotide, single-molecule, single-haplotype and single-cell precision.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature Biotechnology
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Mapping single-cell diploid chromatin fiber architectures using DAF-seq'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this