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Circulating nuclear DNA structural features, origins, and complete size profile revealed by fragmentomics
Cynthia Sanchez, … , Rita Tanos, Alain R. Thierry
Cynthia Sanchez, … , Rita Tanos, Alain R. Thierry
Published February 11, 2021
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(7):e144561. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.144561.
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Resource and Technical Advance Genetics Oncology

Circulating nuclear DNA structural features, origins, and complete size profile revealed by fragmentomics

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Abstract

To unequivocally address their unresolved intimate structures in blood, we scrutinized the size distribution of circulating cell-free DNA (cfDNA) using whole-genome sequencing (WGS) from both double- and single-strand DNA library preparations (DSP and SSP, n = 7) and using quantitative PCR (Q-PCR, n = 116). The size profile in healthy individuals was remarkably homogenous when using DSP sequencing or SSP sequencing. CfDNA size profile had a characteristic nucleosome fragmentation pattern. Overall, our data indicate that the proportion of cfDNA inserted in mono-nucleosomes, di-nucleosomes, and chromatin of higher molecular size (>1000 bp) can be estimated as 67.5% to 80%, 9.4% to 11.5%, and 8.5% to 21.0%, respectively. Although DNA on single chromatosomes or mono-nucleosomes is detectable, our data revealed that cfDNA is highly nicked (97%–98%) on those structures, which appear to be subjected to continuous nuclease activity in the bloodstream. Fragments analysis allows the distinction of cfDNA of different origins: first, cfDNA size profile analysis may be useful in cfDNA extract quality control; second, subtle but reliable differences between metastatic colorectal cancer patients and healthy individuals vary with the proportion of malignant cell-derived cfDNA in plasma extracts, pointing to a higher degree of cfDNA fragmentation and nuclease activity in samples with high malignant cell cfDNA content.

Authors

Cynthia Sanchez, Benoit Roch, Thibault Mazard, Philippe Blache, Zahra Al Amir Dache, Brice Pastor, Ekaterina Pisareva, Rita Tanos, Alain R. Thierry

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Figure 6

Representation of the crystal structure of the nucleosome core particle, chromatosome, and chromatosome with a flexible DNA chain, on the cfDNA fragment size profile of the 7 healthy subjects, as determined by SSP-S.

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Representation of the crystal structure of the nucleosome core particle,...
The chromatosome with 167 bp DNA fragment is the most present cfDNA-associated structure, while being of low frequency (~2%). The nucleosome core particle devoid of H1 containing 147–160 bp is the second most present structure (1.1%–1.2%). Arrows on a nucleosome structure indicate the minor groove DNA sites subject to DNase attacks, explaining the ~10 bp periodic subpeaks in size profile revealing nicks on the nucleosome-associated DNA, and fragmentation down to 40 nt single-stranded DNA, when using SSP-S. Images of the crystal structure of chromatosome and nucleosome at 3.5 angstrom resolution, from the NIPDB data bank (4QLC and 5ONW, respectively). NIPDB, Nucleic Acid–Protein Interaction Database, https://npidb.belozersky.msu.ru

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