Daniel MacArthur
@dgmacarthur.bsky.social
5.5K followers 1.3K following 69 posts
Genomics, big data, open science, diversity. Director of the Centre for Population Genomics, focused on building a more equitable future for genomic medicine. Opinions my own.
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dgmacarthur.bsky.social
And now the fourth preprint from the TenK10K phase 1 dataset, led by @anglixue.bsky.social from @drjosephpowell.bsky.social's team - looking at genetic impacts on cell type-specific chromatin accessibility in 1,000 individuals who also have WGS and scRNA-seq!
anglixue.bsky.social
New preprint alert: tinyurl.com/tenk10k-multiome. Excited to share our analysis on the impact of genetic variants on single-cell chromatin accessibility in blood, using scATAC-seq and WGS from over 1,000 donors and 3.5M nuclei as part of TenK10K phase 1 🧬
🧵👇 (1/n)
Genetic regulation of cell type-specific chromatin accessibility shapes immune function and disease risk
Understanding how genetic variation influences gene regulation at the single-cell level is crucial for elucidating the mechanisms underlying complex diseases. However, limited large-scale single-cell multi-omics data have constrained our understanding of the regulatory pathways that link variants to cell type-specific gene expression. Here we present chromatin accessibility profiles from 3.5 million peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) across 1,042 donors, generated using single-cell ATAC-seq and multiome (RNA+ATAC) sequencing, with matched whole-genome sequencing, generated as part of the TenK10K program. We characterized 440,996 chromatin peaks across 28 immune cell types and mapped 243,273 chromatin accessibility quantitative trait loci (caQTLs), 60% of which are cell type-specific. Integration with TenK10K scRNA-seq data (5.4 million PBMCs) identified 31,688 candidate cis-regulatory elements colocalized with eQTLs; over half (52.5%) show evidence of causal effects mediated via chromatin accessibility. Integrating caQTLs with GWAS summary statistics for 16 diseases and 44 blood traits uncovered 9.8% - 30.0% more colocalized signals compared with using eQTLs alone, many of which have not been reported in prior studies. We demonstrate cell type-specific mechanisms, such as a regulatory effect on IRGM acting through altered promoter chromatin accessibility in CD8 effector memory T cells but not in naive cells. Using a graph neural network, we inferred peak-to-gene relationships from unpaired multiome data by incorporating caQTL and eQTL signals, achieving up to 80% higher accuracy compared to using paired multiome data without QTL information. This improvement further enhanced gene regulatory network inference, leading to the identification of 128 additional transcription factor (TF)-target gene pairs (a 22% increase). These findings provide an unprecedented single-cell map of chromatin accessibility and genetic variation in human circulating immune cells, establishing a powerful resource for dissecting cell type-specific regulation and advancing our understanding of genetic risk for complex diseases. ### Competing Interest Statement L.C., E.B.D., and K.K.H.F. are employed at Illumina Inc. D.G.M. is a paid advisor to Insitro and GSK, and receives research funding from Google and Microsoft, unrelated to the work described in this manuscript. G.A.F reports grants from National Health and Medical Research Council (Australia), grants from Abbott Diagnostic, Sanofi, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, and NSW Health. G.A.F reports honorarium from CSL, CPC Clinical Research, Sanofi, Boehringer-Ingelheim, Heart Foundation, and Abbott. G.A.F serves as Board Director for the Australian Cardiovascular Alliance (past President), Executive Committee Member for CPC Clinical Research, Founding Director and CMO for Prokardia and Kardiomics, and Executive Committee member for the CAD Frontiers A2D2 Consortium. In addition, G.A.F serves as CMO for the non-profit, CAD Frontiers, with industry partners including, Novartis, Amgen, Siemens Healthineers, ELUCID, Foresite Labs LLC, HeartFlow, Canon, Cleerly, Caristo, Genentech, Artyra, and Bitterroot Bio, Novo Nordisk and Allelica. In addition, G.A.F has the following patents: "Patent Biomarkers and Oxidative Stress" awarded USA May 2017 (US9638699B2) issued to Northern Sydney Local Health District, "Use of P2X7R antagonists in cardiovascular disease" PCT/AU2018/050905 licensed to Prokardia, "Methods for treatment and prevention of vascular disease" PCT/AU2015/000548 issued to The University of Sydney/Northern Sydney Local Health District, "Methods for predicting coronary artery disease" AU202290266 issued to The University of Sydney, and the patent "Novel P2X7 Receptor Antagonists" PCT/AU2022/051400 (23.11.2022), International App No: WO/2023/092175 (01.06.2023), issued to The University of Sydney. ### Funding Statement A.X. is supported by NHMRC Investigator grant 2033018. J.E.P. is supported by NHMRC Investigator grant 2034556, and a Fok Family Fellowship; D.G.M. is supported by an NHMRC investigator grant (2009982). G.A.F. and the BioHEART Study have been supported by NHMRC Investigator Grant, NSW Health Office of Health and Medical Research, and the NSW Health Statewide Biobank scheme. ### Author Declarations I confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained. Yes The details of the IRB/oversight body that provided approval or exemption for the research described are given below: The Human Research Ethics Committee of St Vincent's Hospital gave ethical approval for this work. The National Statement on Ethical Conduct in Human Research of the National Health and Medical Research Council gave ethical approval for this work. I confirm that all necessary patient/participant consent has been obtained and the appropriate institutional forms have been archived, and that any patient/participant/sample identifiers included were not known to anyone (e.g., hospital staff, patients or participants themselves) outside the research group so cannot be used to identify individuals. Yes I understand that all clinical trials and any other prospective interventional studies must be registered with an ICMJE-approved registry, such as ClinicalTrials.gov. I confirm that any such study reported in the manuscript has been registered and the trial registration ID is provided (note: if posting a prospective study registered retrospectively, please provide a statement in the trial ID field explaining why the study was not registered in advance). Yes I have followed all appropriate research reporting guidelines, such as any relevant EQUATOR Network research reporting checklist(s) and other pertinent material, if applicable. Yes Raw caQTL summary statistics will be available at Zenodo website prior to acceptance. [https://github.com/powellgenomicslab/tenk10k\_phase1\_multiome][1] [1]: https://github.com/powellgenomicslab/tenk10k_phase1_multiome
tinyurl.com
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
rningscissors.bsky.social
I think 182 year old research articles should be free

I want to read about the man
RESEARCH ARTICLE • Volume 39, Issue 1001, P221-
222, November 05, 1842
A MAN WITH THREE TESTICLES.
F. Macann
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
ewanbirney.bsky.social
One for the reading pile and this scQTL x Disease in a MR framework feels a v powerful approach (more tissues / cell types please!) -
alberthenry.bsky.social
1. 🚨New preprint: tinyurl.com/tenk10k-causal.
We explored causal effects of gene expression in immune cell types on complex traits and diseases by combining single-cell expression quantitative trait loci (sc-eQTL) mapping in 5M+ cells from 1,925 donors in TenK10K study and GWAS. 🧵
Single-cell genetics identifies cell type-specific causal mechanisms in complex traits and diseases
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been instrumental in uncovering the genetic basis of complex traits. When integrated with expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping, they can elucid...
tinyurl.com
dgmacarthur.bsky.social
Another preprint from the TenK10K program! This work, led by @alberthenry.bsky.social and Anne Senabouth, leverages the unprecedented power of this WGS/single cell RNA-seq cohort to explore causal influences of blood gene expression on immune diseases and traits. Thread:
alberthenry.bsky.social
1. 🚨New preprint: tinyurl.com/tenk10k-causal.
We explored causal effects of gene expression in immune cell types on complex traits and diseases by combining single-cell expression quantitative trait loci (sc-eQTL) mapping in 5M+ cells from 1,925 donors in TenK10K study and GWAS. 🧵
Single-cell genetics identifies cell type-specific causal mechanisms in complex traits and diseases
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been instrumental in uncovering the genetic basis of complex traits. When integrated with expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping, they can elucid...
tinyurl.com
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
gregfindlay.bsky.social
Our latest research is out today on ‪@medrxivpreprint.bsky.social:

www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...

Saturation genome editing of BRCA1 across cell types accurately resolves cancer risk.

Led by the amazing Phoebe Dace. This one’s packed full of data, so check out the paper. Quick highlights… 🧵 1/n
Saturation genome editing of BRCA1 across cell types accurately resolves cancer risk
Germline pathogenic BRCA1 variants predispose women to breast and ovarian cancer. Despite accumulation of functional evidence for variants in BRCA1 , over half of reported single-nucleotide variants (...
www.medrxiv.org
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
htanudisastro.bsky.social
#HGSA2025 week kicks off with the OurDNA symposium tomorrow (with a preview of the OurDNA browser!) Register to attend online here👇
dgmacarthur.bsky.social
Hey Australian genetics/genomics friends: the OurDNA Symposium will be in Sydney on 14 August, just before the HGSA meeting. Learn more about inclusive recruitment for genomics and get a preview of the OurDNA variant browser! events.humanitix.com/ourdna-sympo...
OurDNA Symposium 2025: Partnering for impact
The OurDNA Symposium brings stakeholders together for important conversations about building the foundation for equitable genomics in Australia.
events.humanitix.com
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
nickywhiffin.bsky.social
📣 We are recruiting! Please share!!

Are you a bioinformatician / computational scientist who wants to apply your skills to understanding regulatory biology and improving rare disease diagnosis and treatment? 🧠 💻 🧬 🩺

We have two roles available 👇

🧵 1/4
Image of an old building in Oxford with the heading 'postdoc opportunities' and the text 'computational approaches to improve rare disease diagnosis and treatment' and 'Big Data Institute, University of Oxford'
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
wiringthebrain.bsky.social
This implies there is a huge literature of small microbiome association studies that is JUST NOISE. (As observed for these other fields)
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
conjugateprior.org
About a hundred reasons not to use Excel.

Yes, these are politely described as 'spreadsheet' horror stories, but we all know which bit of software we're really talking about.

(HT @pgmj.bsky.social)
Horror Stories | European Spreadsheet Risk Interest Group
eusprig.org
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
opentargets.org
Preprint out today!

A team led by @tobioinformatics.bsky.social and Bradley Harris in @carlanderson.bsky.social ‘s lab has created the largest single-cell atlas of IBD tissues to date

www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...
UMAP of the 9 populations and 86 cell types identified after quality control and clustering
dgmacarthur.bsky.social
Hey Australian genetics/genomics friends: the OurDNA Symposium will be in Sydney on 14 August, just before the HGSA meeting. Learn more about inclusive recruitment for genomics and get a preview of the OurDNA variant browser! events.humanitix.com/ourdna-sympo...
OurDNA Symposium 2025: Partnering for impact
The OurDNA Symposium brings stakeholders together for important conversations about building the foundation for equitable genomics in Australia.
events.humanitix.com
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
scientificdiscovery.dev
I wrote a new piece on how much progress has been made in treating childhood leukemia.

The answer is: quite a lot!

Before the 1970s, fewer than 10% of children diagnosed survived 5 years after diagnosis.

Now most are cured and around 85% survive that long.
ourworldindata.org/childhood-le...
Two charts present survival rates for childhood leukemia over time, specifically focusing on Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) and Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML). 

In the top panel, for ALL, a series of curved lines represent overall survival rates plotted against years since diagnosis. The lines show a marked increase in survival rates from the late 1960s, when only 14% of children survived more than five years post-diagnosis, to around 94% in the 2010s. Key intervals are labeled, with different colors indicating different periods of diagnosis, ranging from 1972-1975 to 2010-2015.

The bottom panel illustrates survival rates for AML, which are consistently lower overall compared to ALL. Like the top graph, it features several colored lines indicating specific periods. The highest point noted indicates a survival rate of 65%. The graph captures trends in survival as well, showing gradual improvement over time, from 1975-1977 up to 2011-2017.

Data sources for these visualizations are cited at the bottom: Mignon Loh et al. (2023) for ALL and Todd M Cooper et al. (2023) for AML, both from the Children's Oncology Group. The chart is published by Our World in Data, and licensed under Creative Commons by the author, Saloni Dattani.
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
enirenberg.bsky.social
I worry that not enough of a big deal is being made about how long-term the devastation of these budget cuts to our scientific and health agencies will be, beyond the absolute ruin they will cause in the acute period.
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
dgmacarthur.bsky.social
Excited to be in Milan for #eshg2025! If you’re interested in leading analysis of large, diverse cohorts with WGS and cellular genomic data in Australia, I’d be keen to chat - we’re looking to fill a variety of senior comp bio roles: populationgenomics.org.au/careers/ #eshg25
Careers - Centre for Population Genomics
populationgenomics.org.au
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
meganlcook.bsky.social
The Cambridge Companion to Workday
The Routledge Handbook of Dual-Factor Authentication
The Oxford Handbook of Figuring Out How To Add A Signature To This PDF, Why The Hell Is This So Difficult
Reposted by Daniel MacArthur
ecrmaths.bsky.social
This is the best graph I've seen in a while 📊
A graph showing the price per pound for different vehicles and types of cheese. There are a surprising number of cheeses in the top half, such as Roquefort.