Accurate, sensitive, and efficient chromatin accessibility quantification at target loci using UNIChro-seq

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Abstract

Recent progress in statistical and experimental fine mapping of disease risk variants prompts us to focus on specific target loci for functional investigation. However, current genetics is hindered by a limited toolbox for target-loci analysis. To address this, we developed UNIChro-seq, a method that digitally counts accessible chromatin molecules at target loci. UNIChro-seq allows for accurate, sensitive, and efficient quantification of allelic effects compared to conventional methods. Using UNIChro-seq, we investigated the effects of 57 autoimmunity risk alleles on chromatin accessibility and estimated the causal effects of 20 artificial variants generated through genome editing. As a caveat, non-negligible fraction of the edited allele exhibited a falsely positive effect on chromatin accessibility, which can be effectively distinguished from the true causal effect through bi-directional genome editing. Finally, functional dissection of a fine-mapped risk variant at the LEF1 locus illuminated its impact on T cell pathology in rheumatoid arthritis. Together, these findings underscore the utility of combining UNIChro-seq with genome editing technology to enable precise and scalable functional analysis of disease-associated loci.

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