Genome Biology (Feb 2019)

Combined single-cell profiling of expression and DNA methylation reveals splicing regulation and heterogeneity

  • Stephanie M. Linker,
  • Lara Urban,
  • Stephen J. Clark,
  • Mariya Chhatriwala,
  • Shradha Amatya,
  • Davis J. McCarthy,
  • Ingo Ebersberger,
  • Ludovic Vallier,
  • Wolf Reik,
  • Oliver Stegle,
  • Marc Jan Bonder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-019-1644-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background Alternative splicing is a key regulatory mechanism in eukaryotic cells and increases the effective number of functionally distinct gene products. Using bulk RNA sequencing, splicing variation has been studied across human tissues and in genetically diverse populations. This has identified disease-relevant splicing events, as well as associations between splicing and genomic features, including sequence composition and conservation. However, variability in splicing between single cells from the same tissue or cell type and its determinants remains poorly understood. Results We applied parallel DNA methylation and transcriptome sequencing to differentiating human induced pluripotent stem cells to characterize splicing variation (exon skipping) and its determinants. Our results show that variation in single-cell splicing can be accurately predicted based on local sequence composition and genomic features. We observe moderate but consistent contributions from local DNA methylation profiles to splicing variation across cells. A combined model that is built based on genomic features as well as DNA methylation information accurately predicts different splicing modes of individual cassette exons. These categories include the conventional inclusion and exclusion patterns, but also more subtle modes of cell-to-cell variation in splicing. Finally, we identified and characterized associations between DNA methylation and splicing changes during cell differentiation. Conclusions Our study yields new insights into alternative splicing at the single-cell level and reveals a previously underappreciated link between DNA methylation variation and splicing.

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