ORCID Profile
0000-0003-1195-2608
Current Organisation
University of Oxford
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Publisher: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Date: 24-10-2019
DOI: 10.1101/813618
Abstract: Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified over 150,000 links between common genetic variants and human traits or complex diseases. Over 80% of these associations map to polymorphisms in non-coding DNA. Therefore, the challenge is to identify disease-causing variants, the genes they affect, and the cells in which these effects occur. We have developed a platform using ATAC-seq, DNaseI footprints, NG Capture-C and machine learning to address this challenge. Applying this approach to red blood cell traits identifies a significant proportion of known causative variants and their effector genes, which we show can be validated by direct in vivo modelling.
Publisher: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Date: 30-08-2019
DOI: 10.1101/744367
Abstract: We employ and extensively characterise an ex vivo culture system to study terminal erythroid maturation of CD34 + progenitors from the peripheral blood of normal in iduals and patients with Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anaemia type 1 (CDA-I). Using morphological analysis, FACS analysis and the proteomic approach CyTOF, we analysed patient-derived erythroblasts stage-matched with those from healthy donors during the expansion phase and into early differentiation. In patient cells, aspects of disordered erythropoiesis manifest midway through differentiation, including increased proliferation and changes in the DNA accessibility profile. We also show that cultured erythroblasts from CDA-I patients recapitulate the pathognomic feature of this erythroid disorder with up to 40% of the cells having abnormal ‘spongy’ chromatin morphology by electron microscopy, as well as upregulation of GDF15, a marker of ineffective erythropoiesis. In the tertiary phase of culture, patient cells show significantly less enucleation and there is persistence of earlier erythroid precursors. Furthermore, the enucleation defect appears to be more severe in patients with mutations in C15orf41 , as compared to the other known causative gene CDAN1 , indicating a genotype henotype correlation in CDA-I. Such erythroblasts are a valuable resource for investigating the pathogenesis of this disease and provide the opportunity for streamlining diagnosis for CDA-I patients and ultimately other forms of unexplained anaemia.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 22-01-2021
DOI: 10.1038/S41467-020-20809-6
Abstract: Chromosome conformation capture (3C) provides an adaptable tool for studying erse biological questions. Current 3C methods generally provide either low-resolution interaction profiles across the entire genome, or high-resolution interaction profiles at limited numbers of loci. Due to technical limitations, generation of reproducible high-resolution interaction profiles has not been achieved at genome-wide scale. Here, to overcome this barrier, we systematically test each step of 3C and report two improvements over current methods. We show that up to 30% of reporter events generated using the popular in situ 3C method arise from ligations between two in idual nuclei, but this noise can be almost entirely eliminated by isolating intact nuclei after ligation. Using Nuclear-Titrated Capture-C, we generate reproducible high-resolution genome-wide 3C interaction profiles by targeting 8055 gene promoters in erythroid cells. By pairing high-resolution 3C interaction calls with nascent gene expression we interrogate the role of promoter hubs and super-enhancers in gene regulation.
Publisher: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Date: 02-03-2020
DOI: 10.1101/2020.03.02.953745
Abstract: Chromosome conformation capture (3C) provides an adaptable tool for studying erse biological questions. Current 3C methods provide either low-resolution interaction profiles across the entire genome, or high-resolution interaction profiles at up to several hundred loci. All 3C methods are affected to varying degrees by inefficiency, bias and noise. As such, generation of reproducible high-resolution interaction profiles has not been achieved at scale. To overcome this barrier, we systematically tested and improved upon current methods. We show that isolation of 3C libraries from intact nuclei, as well as shortening and titration of enrichment oligonucleotides used in high-resolution methods reduces noise and increases on-target sequencing. We combined these technical modifications into a new method Nuclear-Titrated (NuTi) Capture-C, which provides a -fold increase in informative sequencing content over current Capture-C protocols. Using NuTi Capture-C we target 8,061 promoters in triplicate, demonstrating that this method generates reproducible high-resolution genome-wide 3C interaction profiles at scale.
Location: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
No related grants have been discovered for Veronica Buckle.