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  1. ---
  2. title: Bioinformatic analysis of complex, high-throughput genomic and epigenomic data in the context of $\mathsf{CD4}^{+}$ T-cell differentiation and diagnosis and treatment of transplant rejection
  3. author: |
  4. Ryan C. Thompson \
  5. Su Lab \
  6. The Scripps Research Institute
  7. date: October 24, 2019
  8. theme: Boadilla
  9. aspectratio: 169
  10. fontsize: 14pt
  11. ---
  12. ## Organ transplants are a life-saving treatment
  13. ::: incremental
  14. * 36,528 transplants performed in the USA in 2018[^organdonor]
  15. * 100 transplants every day!
  16. * Over 113,000 people on the national transplant waiting list as of
  17. July 2019
  18. :::
  19. [^organdonor]: [organdonor.gov](https://www.organdonor.gov/statistics-stories/statistics.html)
  20. ## Organ donation statistics for the USA in 2018[^organdonor]
  21. \centering
  22. ![](graphics/presentation/transplants-organ-CROP.pdf)
  23. ## Types of grafts
  24. A graft is categorized based on the relationship between donor and recipient:
  25. . . .
  26. ::: incremental
  27. * **Autograft:** Donor and recipient are the *same individual*
  28. * **Allograft:** Donor and recipient are *different individuals* of
  29. the *same species*
  30. * **Xenograft:** Donor and recipient are *different species*
  31. :::
  32. ## Recipient T-cells reject allogenic MHCs
  33. ::::: {.columns}
  34. ::: {.column width="75%"}
  35. :::: incremental
  36. <!-- Vertical alignment hacks -->
  37. \rule{\linewidth}{0pt}
  38. \vspace*{36pt}
  39. * TCR binds to both antigen *and* MHC surface \vspace{10pt}
  40. * HLA genes encoding MHC proteins are highly polymorphic \vspace{10pt}
  41. * Variants in donor MHC can trigger the same T-cell response as a
  42. foreign antigen
  43. \vspace*{36pt}
  44. \rule{\linewidth}{0pt}
  45. ::::
  46. :::
  47. ::: {.column width="25%"}
  48. ![\footnotesize Janeway's Immunobio- logy (2012), Fig. 9.19](graphics/presentation/janeway-fig9.19-TCR.png){ height=70% }
  49. :::
  50. :::::
  51. ## Allograft rejection is a major long-term problem
  52. ![Kidney allograft survival rates in children by transplant year[^kim-marks]](graphics/presentation/kidney-graft-survival.png){ height=65% }
  53. [^kim-marks]:[ Kim & Marks. "Long-term outcomes of children after solid organ transplantation". In: Clinics (2014)](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3884158/?report=classic)
  54. ## Rejection is treated with immune suppressive drugs
  55. <!-- TODO: Need a graphic, or maybe a table of common drugs +
  56. mechanisms, or a diagram for periodic checking. -->
  57. ::: incremental
  58. * Graft recipient must take immune suppressive drugs indefinitely
  59. * Graft is monitored for rejection and dosage adjusted over time
  60. * Immune suppression is a delicate balance: too much and too little
  61. are both problematic.
  62. :::
  63. ## My thesis topics
  64. <!-- Needs revision -->
  65. ### Topic 1: Immune memory
  66. Genome-wide epigenetic analysis of H3K4 and H3K27 methylation in naïve
  67. and memory $\mathsf{CD4}^{+}$ T-cell activation
  68. ### Topic 2: Diagnostics for rejection
  69. Improving array-based diagnostics for transplant rejection by
  70. optimizing data preprocessing
  71. ### Topic 3: Blood profiling during treatment
  72. Globin-blocking for more effective blood RNA-seq analysis in primate
  73. animal model for experimental graft rejection treatment
  74. ## Today's focus
  75. ### \Large Topic 1: Immune memory
  76. \Large
  77. Genome-wide epigenetic analysis of H3K4 and H3K27 methylation in naïve
  78. and memory $\mathsf{CD4}^{+}$ T-cell activation
  79. ## Memory cells: faster, stronger, and more independent
  80. ![Naïve and memory T-cell responses to activation](graphics/presentation/T-cells-A-SVG.png)
  81. ## Memory cells: faster, stronger, and more independent
  82. ![Naïve and memory T-cell responses to activation](graphics/presentation/T-cells-B-SVG.png)
  83. ## Memory cells: faster, stronger, and more independent
  84. ![Naïve and memory T-cell responses to activation](graphics/presentation/T-cells-C-SVG.png)
  85. ## Memory cells: faster, stronger, and more independent
  86. ![Naïve and memory T-cell responses to activation](graphics/presentation/T-cells-D-SVG.png)
  87. ## Memory cells are a problem for immune suppression
  88. <!-- Need graphics? Or maybe just mark this slide as speaker notes for the previous one -->
  89. \large
  90. Compared to naïve cells, memory cells:
  91. \normalsize
  92. * respond to a lower antigen concentration
  93. * respond more strongly at any given antigen concentration
  94. * require less co-stimulation
  95. * are somewhat independent of some types of co-stimulation required by
  96. naïve cells
  97. * evolve over time to respond even more strongly to their antigen
  98. ## Memory cells are a problem for immune suppression
  99. \large
  100. Result:
  101. \normalsize
  102. * Memory cells require progressively higher doses of immune suppresive
  103. drugs
  104. * Dosage cannot be increased indefinitely without compromising the
  105. immune system's ability to fight infection
  106. ## We need a better understanding of immune memory
  107. * Cell surface markers of naïve and memory $\mathsf{CD4}^{+}$ T-cells
  108. are fairly well-characterized
  109. * But internal mechanisms that allow memory cells to respond
  110. differently to the same stimulus (antigen presentation) are not
  111. well-understood
  112. . . .
  113. * A reasonable hypothesis is that some of these mechanisms are
  114. epigenetic: using histone marks or DNA methylation to regulate the
  115. expression of certain genes
  116. * We can test this hypothesis by measuring gene expression (using
  117. RNA-seq) and histone methylation (using ChIP-seq) in naïve and
  118. memory T-cells before and after activation
  119. ## Experimental design
  120. * Separately isolate naïve and memory $\mathsf{CD4}^{+}$ T-cells from
  121. 4 donors
  122. * Activate with CD3/CD28 beads
  123. * Take samples at 4 time points: Day 0 (pre-activation), Day 1 (early
  124. activation), Day 5 (peak activation), and Day 14 (post-activation)
  125. * Do RNA-seq + ChIP-seq for 3 histone marks (H3K4me2, H3K4me3, &
  126. H3K27me3) for each sample.
  127. Data generated by Sarah Lamere, published in GEO as
  128. [GSE73214](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE73214)
  129. ## A few intermediate analysis steps are required
  130. ![Flowchart of workflow for data analysis](graphics/CD4-csaw/rulegraphs/rulegraph-all-RASTER100.png)
  131. ## Histone modifications occur on consecutive histones
  132. ![ChIP-seq coverage in IL2 gene[^lamerethesis]](graphics/presentation/LaMere-thesis-fig3.9-SVG-CROP.png){ height=65% }
  133. [^lamerethesis]: Sarah LaMere. "Dynamic epigenetic regulation of CD4 T cell activation and memory formation". PhD thesis. TSRI, 2015.
  134. ## Histone modifications occur on consecutive histones
  135. ![Strand cross-correlation plots](graphics/presentation/CCF-plots-A-SVG.png)
  136. ## Histone modifications occur on consecutive histones
  137. ![Strand cross-correlation plots](graphics/presentation/CCF-plots-B-SVG.png)
  138. ## Histone modifications occur on consecutive histones
  139. ![Strand cross-correlation plots](graphics/presentation/CCF-plots-C-SVG.png)
  140. ## SICER identifies enriched regions across the genome
  141. ![Finding "islands" of coverage with SICER[^sicer]](graphics/presentation/SICER-fig1-SVG.png)
  142. [^sicer]: [Zang et al. “A clustering approach for identification of enriched domains from histone modification ChIP-Seq data”. In: Bioinformatics 25.15 (2009)](https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btp340)
  143. ## IDR identifies *reproducible* enriched regions
  144. ![Example irreproducible discovery rate[^idr] score consistency plot](graphics/presentation/IDR-example-CROP-RASTER.png){ height=65% }
  145. [^idr]: [Li et al. “Measuring reproducibility of high-throughput experiments”. In: AOAS (2011)](https://doi.org/10.1214/11-AOAS466)
  146. ## Finding enriched regions across the genome
  147. ![Peak-calling summary statistics](graphics/presentation/RCT-thesis-table2.2-SVG-CROP.png)
  148. ## Each histone mark has an "effective promoter radius"
  149. ![Enrichment of peaks near promoters](graphics/CD4-csaw/Promoter-Peak-Distance-Profile-PAGE1-CROP.pdf)
  150. ## Peaks in promoters correlate with gene expression
  151. ![Expression distributions of genes with and without promoter peaks](graphics/presentation/FPKM-by-Peak-Violin-Plots-A-SVG.png)
  152. ## Peaks in promoters correlate with gene expression
  153. ![Expression distributions of genes with and without promoter peaks](graphics/presentation/FPKM-by-Peak-Violin-Plots-B-SVG.png)
  154. ## Peaks in promoters correlate with gene expression
  155. ![Expression distributions of genes with and without promoter peaks](graphics/presentation/FPKM-by-Peak-Violin-Plots-C-SVG.png)
  156. ## Peaks in promoters correlate with gene expression
  157. ![Expression distributions of genes with and without promoter peaks](graphics/presentation/FPKM-by-Peak-Violin-Plots-D-SVG.png)
  158. ## Peaks in promoters correlate with gene expression
  159. ![Expression distributions of genes with and without promoter peaks](graphics/presentation/FPKM-by-Peak-Violin-Plots-Z-SVG.png)
  160. ## The story so far
  161. <!-- TODO: Left column: text; right column: flip through relevant image -->
  162. * H3K4me2, H3K4me3, and H3K27me3 occur on many consecutive histones in
  163. broad regions across the genome
  164. * These enriched regions occur more commonly within a certain radius
  165. of gene promoters
  166. * This "effective promoter radius" is consistent across all samples
  167. for a given histone mark, but differs between histone marks
  168. * Presence or absence of a peak within this radius is correlated with
  169. gene expression
  170. . . .
  171. Next: Does the position of a histone modification within a gene
  172. promoter matter to that gene's expression, or is it merely the
  173. presence or absence anywhere within the promoter?
  174. ## H3K4me2 promoter neighborhood K-means clusters
  175. ![Cluster means for H3K4me2](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me2-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  176. ## H3K4me2 promoter neighborhood cluster PCA
  177. ::::: {.columns}
  178. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  179. ![Cluster means for H3K4me2](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me2-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  180. :::
  181. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  182. ![PCA plot of promoters](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me2-neighborhood-PCA-CROP.png)
  183. :::
  184. :::::
  185. ## H3K4me2 promoter neighborhood cluster expression
  186. ::::: {.columns}
  187. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  188. ![Cluster means for H3K4me2](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me2-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  189. :::
  190. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  191. ![Cluster expression distributions](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me2-neighborhood-expression-CROP-ROT90.png)
  192. :::
  193. :::::
  194. ## H3K4me3 promoter neighborhood cluster PCA
  195. ::::: {.columns}
  196. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  197. ![Cluster means for H3K4me3](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me3-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  198. :::
  199. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  200. ![PCA plot of promoters](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me3-neighborhood-PCA-CROP.png)
  201. :::
  202. :::::
  203. ## H3K4me3 promoter neighborhood cluster expression
  204. ::::: {.columns}
  205. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  206. ![Cluster means for H3K4me3](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me3-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  207. :::
  208. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  209. ![Cluster expression distributions](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me3-neighborhood-expression-CROP-ROT90.png)
  210. :::
  211. :::::
  212. ## H3K27me3 promoter neighborhood cluster PCA
  213. ::::: {.columns}
  214. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  215. ![Cluster means for H3K27me3](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K27me3-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  216. :::
  217. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  218. ![PCA plot of promoters](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K27me3-neighborhood-PCA-CROP.png)
  219. :::
  220. :::::
  221. ## H3K27me3 promoter neighborhood cluster expression
  222. ::::: {.columns}
  223. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  224. ![Cluster means for H3K27me3](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K27me3-neighborhood-clusters-CROP.png)
  225. :::
  226. ::: {.column width="50%"}
  227. ![Cluster expression distributions](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K27me3-neighborhood-expression-CROP-ROT90.png)
  228. :::
  229. :::::
  230. ## What have we learned?
  231. ### H3K4me2 & H3K4me3
  232. * Peak closer to promoter $\Rightarrow$ more likely gene is highly
  233. expressed
  234. * Slightly asymmetric in favor of peaks downstream of TSS
  235. . . .
  236. ### H3K27me3
  237. * Depletion of H3K27me3 at TSS associated with elevated gene
  238. expression
  239. * Enrichment of H3K27me3 upstream of TSS even more strongly associated
  240. with elevated expression
  241. * Other coverage profiles not associated with elevated expression
  242. ## Differential modification disappears by Day 14
  243. ![Differential modification between naïve and memory samples at each time point](graphics/presentation/RCT-thesis-table2.4-A-SVG-CROP.png)
  244. ## Differential modification disappears by Day 14
  245. ![Differential modification between naïve and memory samples at each time point](graphics/presentation/RCT-thesis-table2.4-B-SVG-CROP.png)
  246. ## Convergence at Day 14 H3K4me2
  247. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me2-promoter-PCA-group-CROP.png)
  248. ## Convergence at Day 14 H3K4me3
  249. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K4me3-promoter-PCA-group-CROP.png)
  250. ## Convergence at Day 14 H3K27me3
  251. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/CD4-csaw/ChIP-seq/H3K27me3-promoter-PCA-group-CROP.png)
  252. ## Convergence at Day 14 RNA-seq (PC 2 & 3)
  253. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/CD4-csaw/RNA-seq/PCA-final-23-CROP.png)
  254. ## MOFA identifies shared variation across all 4 data sets
  255. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/presentation/MOFA-varExplained-matrix-A-CROP.png)
  256. ## MOFA identifies shared variation across all 4 data sets
  257. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/presentation/MOFA-varExplained-matrix-B-CROP.png)
  258. ## MOFA shared variation captures convergence pattern
  259. ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/CD4-csaw/MOFA-LF-scatter-small.png)
  260. ## What have we learned?
  261. * Almost no differential modification observed between naïve and
  262. memory at Day 14, despite plenty of differential modification at
  263. earlier time points.
  264. * RNA-seq data and all 3 histone marks' ChIP-seq data all show
  265. "convergence" between naïve and memory by Day 14 in the first 2 or 3
  266. principal coordinates.
  267. * MOFA captures this convergence pattern in one of the latent factors,
  268. indicating that this is a shared pattern across all 4 data sets.
  269. <!-- ## Slide -->
  270. <!-- ![(Insert figure legend)](graphics/CD4-csaw/LaMere2016_fig8.pdf) -->
  271. ## Takeaway 1: Each histone mark has an "effective promoter radius"
  272. * H3K4me2, H3K4me3, and H3K27me3 ChIP-seq reads are enriched in broad
  273. regions across the genome, representing areas where the histone
  274. modification is present
  275. * These enriched regions occur more commonly within a certain radius
  276. of gene promoters
  277. * This "effective promoter radius" is specific to each histone mark
  278. * Presence or absence of a peak within this radius is correlated with
  279. gene expression
  280. ## Takeaway 2: Peak position within the promoter is important
  281. * H3K4me2 and H3K4me3 peaks are more strongly associated with elevated
  282. gene expression the closer they are to the TSS, with a slight bias
  283. toward downstream peaks.
  284. * H3K27me3 depletion at the TSS and enrichement upstream are both
  285. associated with elevated expression, while other patterns are not.
  286. * In all histone marks, position of modification within promoter
  287. appears to be an important factor in association with gene
  288. expression
  289. ## Takeaway 3: Expression & epigenetic state both converge at Day 14
  290. * At Day 14, almost no differential modification observed between
  291. naïve and memory cells
  292. * Naïve and memory converge visually in PCoA plots
  293. * Convergence is a shared pattern of variation across all 3 histone
  294. marks and gene expression
  295. * This is consistent with the hypothesis that the naïve cells have
  296. differentiated into a more memory-like phenotype by day 14.