Measurement of cell-free fetal DNA (cffDNA) is an indispensable process for non-invasive prenatal screening (NIPS). According to recent studies, cffDNA in maternal plasma can be enriched for various lengths of fragments, and a sufficient amount of cffDNA can effectively eliminate background interference on the part of maternal DNA. Therefore, we developed a simple and effective separation method, improved NIPS (iNIPS), that enriches the fetal fraction and improves the accuracy of NIPS for fetal aneuploid detection. We adopted a novel strategy to achieve enrichment of 125–135 bp cell-free DNA (cfDNA) by e-gel electrophoresis. To evaluate clinical performance, we compared NIPS and iNIPS results from 2153 retrospective clinical samples. Of the 22 samples with NIPS results of “no call”, 17 samples were reclassified as “unaffected” (9 cases of chr13, 5 cases of chr18, and 3 cases of chr21); 2 samples remained classified as “no call” (1 case of chr18 and 1 case of chr21); and 3 samples were identified as T21 by iNIPS. The average increase in abundance of cfDNA fragments of 125–135 bp was 2.5 times, and the average decrease in maternal background interference was 1.3 times. On this basis, the detection of fetal aneuploidy was highly improved with the fetal fraction as low as 2%; iNIPS achieved 100% sensitivity and 99.90% specificity in retrospective samples.
Copy-number variations (CNV), loss of heterozygosity (LOH), and uniparental disomy (UPD) are large genomic aberrations leading to many common inherited diseases, cancers, and other complex diseases. An integrated tool to identify these aberrations is essential in understanding diseases and in designing clinical interventions. Previous discovery methods based on whole-genome sequencing (WGS) require very high depth of coverage on the whole genome scale, and are cost-wise inefficient. Another approach, whole exome genome sequencing (WEGS), is limited to discovering variations within exons. Thus, we are lacking efficient methods to detect genomic aberrations on the whole genome scale using next-generation sequencing technology. Here we present a method to identify genome-wide CNV, LOH and UPD for the human genome via selectively sequencing a small portion of genome termed Selected Target Regions (SeTRs). In our experiments, the SeTRs are covered by 99.73%~99.95% with sufficient depth. Our developed bioinformatics pipeline calls genome-wide CNVs with high confidence, revealing 8 credible events of LOH and 3 UPD events larger than 5M from 15 individual samples. We demonstrate that genome-wide CNV, LOH and UPD can be detected using a cost-effective SeTRs sequencing approach, and that LOH and UPD can be identified using just a sample grouping technique, without using a matched sample or familial information.
Adequate maternal methyl-donor micronutrient (MET) intake is an important determinant of the organ development and metabolic renovation of offspring. The mechanism involved in skeletal myogenesis and the effect of MET supplementation during pregnancy on the maternal body remain unclear. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the potential effect of methyl donor micronutrients (MET) on skeletal muscle development and metabolism in offspring using pig models. Forty-three Duroc × Erhualian gilts were assigned to two dietary groups during gestation: control diet (CON) and CON diet supplemented with MET (folic acid, methionine, choline, vitamin B6, and vitamin B12). The results showed that maternal MET exposure during pregnancy significantly increased the concentrations of protein, triiodothyronine (T3), and thyroxine (T4) in colostrum and methyl metabolites, including S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH), 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate (5-MTHF), and betaine, in the maternal and offspring umbilical vein serum. A similar pattern was demonstrated in the body weight gain and myofiber diameters in offspring. In addition, maternal MET supplementation significantly increased the concentration of offspring serum insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), T3, and T4; upregulated the mRNA expression of IGF-1 and IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1r) and the phosphorylation level of protein kinases in offspring longissimus dorsi muscle; and upregulated the expression of myogenic genes and fast myosin heavy chain (fast MyHC) in offspring skeletal muscle. Supplementing sows with higher levels of MET during gestation may promote skeletal muscle differentiation and maturity and improve the skeletal muscle mass of the piglets.
Correspondence: Jichun Tan (tjczjh@163.com) and Caixia Liu (liucx1716@163.com) With the development and clinical application of genomics, more and more concern is focused on single-cell sequencing. In the process of single-cell sequencing, whole genome amplification is a key step to enrich sample DNA. Previous studies have compared the performance of different whole genome amplification (WGA) strategies on Illumina sequencing platforms, but there is no related research aimed at Ion Proton platform, which is also a popular next-generation sequencing platform. Here by amplifying cells from six cell lines with different karyotypes, we estimated the data features of four common commercial WGA kits (PicoPLEX WGA Kit, GenomePlex Single Cell Whole Genome Amplification Kit, MALBAC Single Cell Whole Genome Amplification Kit, and REPLI-g Single Cell Kit), including median absolute pairwise difference, uniformity, reproducibility, and fidelity, and examined their performance of copy number variation detection. The results showed that both MALBAC and PicoPLEX could yield high-quality data and had high reproducibility and fidelity; and as for uniformity, PicoPLEX was slightly superior to MALBAC.
Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris (Xcc) can cause black rot in cruciferous plants worldwide. Two‐component systems (TCSs) are key for bacterial adaptation to various environments, including hosts. VemR is a TCS response regulator and crucial for Xcc motility and virulence. Here, we report that RavA is the cognate histidine kinase (HK) of VemR and elucidate the signalling pathway by which VemR regulates Xcc motility and virulence. Genetic analysis showed that VemR is epistatic to RavA. Using bacterial two‐hybrid experiments and pull‐down and phosphorylation assays, we found that RavA can interact with and phosphorylate VemR, suggesting that RavA is the cognate HK of VemR. In addition, we found that RpoN2 and FleQ are epistatic to VemR in regulating bacterial motility and virulence. In vivo and in vitro experiments demonstrated that VemR interacts with FleQ but not with RpoN2. RavA/VemR regulates the expression of the flagellin‐encoding gene fliC by activating the transcription of the rpoN2‐vemR‐fleQ and flhF‐fleN‐fliA operons. In summary, our data show that the RavA/VemR TCS regulates FleQ activity and thus influences the expression of motility‐related genes, thereby affecting Xcc motility and virulence. The identification of this novel signalling pathway will deepen our understanding of Xcc–plant interactions.
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