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Microfluidics for Low Input Epigenomic Analysis and Its Application to Brain Neuroscience

The epigenome carries dynamic information that controls gene expression and maintains cell identity during both disease and normal development. The inherent plasticity of the epigenome paves new avenues for developing diagnostic and therapeutic tools for human diseases. Microfluidic technology has improved the sensitivity and resolution of epigenomic analysis due to its outstanding ability to manipulate nanoliter-scale liquid volumes. In this thesis, I report three projects focusing on low-input, cell-type-specific and spatially resolved histone modification profiling on microfluidic platforms. First, I applied Microfluidic Oscillatory Washing-based Chromatin Immunoprecipitation followed by sequencing (MOWChIP-seq) to study the effect of culture dimensionality, hypoxia stress and bacterium infection on histone modification landscapes of brain tumor cells. I identified differentially marked regions between different culture conditions. Second, I adapted indexed ChIPmentation and introduced mu-CM, a low-input microfluidic device capable of performing 8 assays in parallel on different histone marks using as few as 20 cells in less than 7 hours. Last, I investigated the spatially resolved epigenome and transcriptome of neuronal and glial cells from coronal sections of adult mouse neocortex. I applied unsupervised clustering to identify distinct spatial patterns in neocortex epigenome and transcriptome that were associated with central nervous system development. I demonstrated that our method is well suited for scarce samples, such as biopsy samples from patients in the context of precision medicine. / Doctor of Philosophy / Epigenetic is the study of alternations in organisms not caused by alternation of the genetic codes. Epigenetic information plays pivotal role during growth, aging and disease. Epigenetic information is dynamic and modifiable, and thus serves as an ideal target for various diagnostic and therapeutic strategies of human diseases. Microfluidics is a technology that manipulates liquids with extremely small volumes in miniaturized devices. Microfluidics has improved the sensitivity and resolution of epigenetic analysis. In this thesis, I report three projects focusing on low-input, cell-type-specific and spatially resolved histone modification profiling on microfluidic platforms. Histone modification is one type of epigenetic information and regulates gene expression. First, we studied the influence of culture condition and bacterium infection on histone modification profile of brain tumor cells. Second, we introduced mu-CM, combining a low-input microfluidic device with indexed ChIPmentation and is capable of performing 8 assays in parallel using as few as 20 cells. Last, we investigated spatial variations in the epigenome and transcriptome across adult mouse neocortex, the outer layer of brain involving in higher-order function, such as cognition. I identified distinct spatial patterns responsible for central nervous system development using machine learning algorithm. Our method is well suited for studying scarce samples, such as cells populations isolated from patients in the context of precision medicine.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/101765
Date06 January 2021
CreatorsDeng, Chengyu
ContributorsChemical Engineering, Lu, Chang, Goldstein, Aaron S., Davalos, Rafael V., Tong, Rong
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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