RESUMEN
Precision nuclear run-on (PRO) sequencing (PRO-seq) is a powerful technique for mapping polymerase active sites with nucleotide resolution and measuring newly synthesized transcripts at both promoters and enhancer elements. The current PRO-seq protocol is time-intensive, technically challenging, and requires a large amount of starting material. To overcome these limitations, we developed rapid PRO-seq (rPRO-seq) which utilizes pre-adenylated single-stranded DNAs (AppDNA), a dimer blocking oligonucleotide (DBO), on-bead 5' RNA end repair, and column-based purification. These modifications enabled efficient transcriptome mapping within a single day (â¼12 hours) increasing ligation efficiency, abolished adapter dimers, and reduced sample loss and RNA degradation. We demonstrate the reproducibility of rPRO-seq in measuring polymerases at promoters, gene bodies, and enhancers as compared to original PRO-seq protocols. Additionally, rPRO-seq is scalable, allowing for transcriptome mapping with as little as 25,000 cells. We apply rPRO-seq to study the role of Integrator in mouse hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (mHSPC) homeostasis, identifying Ints11 as an essential component of transcriptional regulation and RNA processing in mHSPC homeostasis. Overall, rPRO-seq represents a significant advance in the field of nascent transcript analyses and will be a valuable tool for generating patient-specific genome-wide transcription profiles with minimal sample requirements.
RESUMEN
TET2 haploinsufficiency is a driving event in myeloid cancers and is associated with a worse prognosis in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Enhancing residual TET2 activity using vitamin C increases oxidized 5-methylcytosine (mC) formation and promotes active DNA demethylation via base excision repair (BER), which slows leukemia progression. We utilize genetic and compound library screening approaches to identify rational combination treatment strategies to improve use of vitamin C as an adjuvant therapy for AML. In addition to increasing the efficacy of several US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drugs, vitamin C treatment with poly-ADP-ribosyl polymerase inhibitors (PARPis) elicits a strong synergistic effect to block AML self-renewal in murine and human AML models. Vitamin-C-mediated TET activation combined with PARPis causes enrichment of chromatin-bound PARP1 at oxidized mCs and γH2AX accumulation during mid-S phase, leading to cell cycle stalling and differentiation. Given that most AML subtypes maintain residual TET2 expression, vitamin C could elicit broad efficacy as a PARPi therapeutic adjuvant.