Epigenetic patterns in a complete human genome
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Event overview
The completion of the first telomere-to-telomere human genome, T2T-CHM13, enables exploration of the full epigenome, removing limitations previously imposed by the missing reference sequence. Existing epigenetic studies omit unassembled and unmappable genomic regions, such as centromeres, peri-centromeres, acrocentric chromosome arms, sub-telomeres, segmental duplications, and tandem repeats.
In this webinar, Ariel Gershman, a doctoral candidate at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, discussed how she and her team leveraged the new assembly to measure enrichment of epigenetic marks with short reads using k-mer assisted mapping methods. This granted array-level enrichment information to characterize the epigenetic regulation of these satellite repeats. Using nanopore sequencing data, the team generated base-level maps of the most complete human methylome ever produced. They examined methylation patterns in satellite DNA and revealed organized patterns of methylation along individual molecules.
When exploring the centromeric epigenome, Gershman and colleagues discovered a distinctive dip in centromere methylation consistent with active sites of kinetochore assembly. With long-read chromatin accessibility measurements (nanoNOMe) paired to CUT&RUN data, the team found the hypomethylated region was extremely inaccessible and paired to CENP-A/B binding. With long reads, they interrogated allele-specific, long-range, epigenetic patterns in complex macro-satellite arrays, such as those involved in X chromosome inactivation. Using the single-molecule measurements, the team clustered reads based on methylation status alone, distinguishing epigenetically heterogeneous and homogeneous areas. The analysis provides a framework to investigate the most elusive regions of the human genome, applying both long- and short-read technology to grant new insights into epigenetic regulation.
Meet the speaker
Ariel Gershman is a doctoral candidate in Dr. Winston Timp’s lab at Johns Hopkins University. Her research focuses primarily on sequencing technology, genome assembly, and epigenetics. She has been working closely with the Telomere-to-Telomere consortium to use nanopore sequencing to generate a complete map of the human methylome.