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Analysis of Clonal Composition in Human iPSC and ESC and Derived 2D and 3D Differentiated Cultures. | LitMetric

Analysis of Clonal Composition in Human iPSC and ESC and Derived 2D and 3D Differentiated Cultures.

Methods Mol Biol

Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Sanford Consortium for Regenerative Medicine, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA.

Published: June 2022


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Article Abstract

Human induced pluripotent and embryonic stem cell cultures (hiPSC/hESC) are phenotypically heterogeneous and prone to clonal deviations during subculturing and differentiation. Clonal deviations often emerge unnoticed, but they can change the biology of the cell culture with a negative impact on experimental reproducibility. Here, we describe a computational workflow to profile the bulk clonal composition in a hiPSC/hESC culture that can also be used to infer clonal deviations. This workflow processes data obtained with two versions of the same method. The two versions-epigenetic and transcriptomic-rely on a mechanism of stochastic H3K4me3 deposition during hiPSC/hESC derivation. This mechanism generates a signature of ten or more H3K4me3-enriched clustered protocadherin (PCDH) promoters distinct in every single cell. The aggregate of single-cell signatures provides an identificatory feature in every hiPSC/hESC line. This feature is stably transmitted to the cell progeny of the culture even after differentiation unless there is a clonal deviation event that changes the internal balance of single-cell signatures. H3K4me3 signatures can be profiled by chromatin immunoprecipitation and next-generation sequencing (ChIP-seq). Alternatively, an equivalent PCDH-expression version can be profiled by RNA-seq in PCDH-expressing hiPSC/hESC-derived cells (such as neurons, astrocytes, and cardiomyocytes; and, in long-term cultures, such as cerebral organoids). Notably, our workflow can also distinguish genetically identical hiPSC/hESC lines derived from the same patient or generated in the same editing process. Together, we propose a method to improve data sharing and reproducibility in the hiPSC and hESC fields.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/7651_2021_414DOI Listing

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