Abstract
Sex differences and age-related changes in the human heart at the tissue, cell, and molecular level have been well-documented and many may be relevant for cardiovascular disease. However, how molecular programs within individual cell types vary across individuals by age and sex remains poorly characterized. To better understand this variation, we performed single-nucleus combinatorial indexing (sci) ATAC- and RNA-Seq in human heart samples from nine donors. We identify hundreds of differentially expressed genes by age and sex. Sex dependent alterations include pathways such as TGFβ signaling and metabolic shifts by sex, evident in both transcriptional alterations and differing presence of transcription factor (TF) motifs in accessible chromatin. Age was associated with changes such as immune activation-related transcriptional and chromatin accessibility differences, as well as changes in the relative proportion of cardiomyocytes, neurons, and perivascular cells. In addition, we compare our adult-derived ATAC-Seq profiles to analogous fetal cell types to identify putative developmental-stage-specific regulatory factors. Finally, we train predictive models of cell-type-specific RNA expression levels utilizing ATAC-Seq profiles to link distal regulatory sequences to promoters, quantifying the predictive value of a simple TF-to-expression regulatory grammar and identifying cell-type-specific TFs.
Competing Interest Statement
C.T. is a SAB member, consultant and/or co-founder of Algen Biotechnologies, Altius Therapeutics, and Scale Biosciences. J.S. is a scientific advisory board member, consultant and/or cofounder of Cajal Neuroscience, Guardant Health, Maze Therapeutics, Camp4 Therapeutics, Phase Genomics, Adaptive Biotechnologies and Scale Biosciences.
Footnotes
The "Acknowledgments" section has been updated to include grant numbers for two CZI awards, as well as to correct the grant number of a U54 grant that supported this work. Additionally, the second author has been edited to be listed as "Gregory T Booth", instead of "Greg Booth".