4.8 Article

Somatic mutations and cell identity linked by Genotyping of Transcriptomes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 571, Issue 7765, Pages 355-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1367-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Lymphoma Research Foundation
  2. Marie Sklodowska-Curie fellowships
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health
  4. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center Tri-Institutional MD-PhD Program [T32GM007739]
  5. Cancer Research & Treatment Fund (CRT)
  6. Stand Up to Cancer Innovative Research Grant [SU2C-AACR-IRG-03-16, SU2C-AACR-IRG-0616]
  7. Department of Defense [W81XWH-16-1-0438]
  8. Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists
  9. American Society of Hematology
  10. National Institutes of Health [DP2-CA239065]
  11. Leukemia Lymphoma Society
  12. Columbia University Physical Sciences in Oncology Center [U54CA193313]
  13. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute [R01HL145283-01]

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Defining the transcriptomic identity of malignant cells is challenging in the absence of surface markers that distinguish cancer clones from one another, or from admixed non-neoplastic cells. To address this challenge, here we developed Genotyping of Transcriptomes (GoT), a method to integrate genotyping with high-throughput droplet-based single-cell RNA sequencing. We apply GoT to profile 38,290 CD34(+) cells from patients with CALR-mutated myeloproliferative neoplasms to study how somatic mutations corrupt the complex process of human haematopoiesis. High-resolution mapping of malignant versus normal haematopoietic progenitors revealed an increasing fitness advantage with myeloid differentiation of cells with mutated CALR. We identified the unfolded protein response as a predominant outcome of CALR mutations, with a considerable dependency on cell identity, as well as upregulation of the NF-kappa B pathway specifically in uncommitted stem cells. We further extended the GoT toolkit to genotype multiple targets and loci that are distant from transcript ends. Together, these findings reveal that the transcriptional output of somatic mutations in myeloproliferative neoplasms is dependent on the native cell identity.

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