期刊论文详细信息
Inflammation and Regeneration
Multiomic technologies for analyses of inborn errors of immunity: from snapshot of the average cell to dynamic temporal picture at single-cell resolution
Yusuke Kawashima1  Osamu Ohara2  Ryuta Nishikomori3 
[1] Department of Applied Genomics, Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 292-0818, Kisarazu, Japan;Department of Applied Genomics, Kazusa DNA Research Institute, 292-0818, Kisarazu, Japan;Future Medicine Education and Research Organization, Chiba University, 260-8670, Chiba, Japan;Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Kurume University School of Medicine, 830-0011, Kurume, Japan;
关键词: Multiomics;    Autoinflammatory diseases;    Single-cell;    Measurement granularity;    Inborn errors of immunity;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s41232-021-00169-4
来源: Springer
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【 摘 要 】

Advances in DNA sequencing technology have significantly impacted human genetics; they have enabled the analysis of genetic causes of rare diseases, which are usually pathogenic variants in a single gene at the nucleotide sequence level. However, since the quantity of data regarding the relationship between genotype and phenotype is insufficient to diagnose some rare immune diseases definitively, genetic information alone cannot help obtain a mechanistic understanding of the disease etiology. For such cases, exploring the molecular phenotype using multiomic analyses could be the approach of choice. In this review, we first overview current technologies for multiomic analysis, particularly focusing on RNA and protein profiling of bulk cell ensembles. We then discuss the measurement modality and granularity issue because it is critical to design multiomic experiments properly. Next, we illustrate the importance of bioimaging by describing our experience with the analysis of an autoinflammatory disease, cryopyrin-associated periodic fever syndrome, which could be caused by low-frequency somatic mosaicism and cannot be well characterized only by multiomic snapshot analyses of an ensemble of many immune cells. We found it powerful to complement the multiomic data with bioimaging data that can provide us with indispensable time-specific dynamic information of every single cell in the “immune cell society.” Because we now have many measurement tools in different modalities and granularity to tackle the etiology of rare hereditary immune diseases, we might gain a deeper understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms of these diseases by taking full advantage of these tools in an integrated manner.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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