Qiujun Wang
Tsinghua University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Qiujun Wang.
Nature | 2016
Jingyi Wu; Bo Huang; He Chen; Qiangzong Yin; Yang Liu; Yunlong Xiang; Bingjie Zhang; Bofeng Liu; Qiujun Wang; Weikun Xia; Wenzhi Li; Yuanyuan Li; Jing Ma; Xu Peng; Hui Zheng; Jia Ming; Wenhao Zhang; Jing Zhang; Geng Tian; Feng Xu; Zai Chang; Jie Na; Xuerui Yang; Wei Xie
In mammals, extensive chromatin reorganization is essential for reprogramming terminally committed gametes to a totipotent state during preimplantation development. However, the global chromatin landscape and its dynamics in this period remain unexplored. Here we report a genome-wide map of accessible chromatin in mouse preimplantation embryos using an improved assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with high throughput sequencing (ATAC-seq) approach with CRISPR/Cas9-assisted mitochondrial DNA depletion. We show that despite extensive parental asymmetry in DNA methylomes, the chromatin accessibility between the parental genomes is globally comparable after major zygotic genome activation (ZGA). Accessible chromatin in early embryos is widely shaped by transposable elements and overlaps extensively with putative cis-regulatory sequences. Unexpectedly, accessible chromatin is also found near the transcription end sites of active genes. By integrating the maps of cis-regulatory elements and single-cell transcriptomes, we construct the regulatory network of early development, which helps to identify the key modulators for lineage specification. Finally, we find that the activities of cis-regulatory elements and their associated open chromatin diminished before major ZGA. Surprisingly, we observed many loci showing non-canonical, large open chromatin domains over the entire transcribed units in minor ZGA, supporting the presence of an unusually permissive chromatin state. Together, these data reveal a unique spatiotemporal chromatin configuration that accompanies early mammalian development.
Nature | 2016
Bingjie Zhang; Hui Zheng; Bo Huang; Wenzhi Li; Yunlong Xiang; Xu Peng; Jia Ming; Xiaotong Wu; Yu Zhang; Qianhua Xu; Wenqiang Liu; Xiaochen Kou; Yanhong Zhao; Wenteng He; Chong Li; Bo Chen; Yuanyuan Li; Qiujun Wang; Jing Ma; Qiangzong Yin; Kehkooi Kee; Anming Meng; Shaorong Gao; Feng Xu; Jie Na; Wei Xie
Histone modifications are fundamental epigenetic regulators that control many crucial cellular processes. However, whether these marks can be passed on from mammalian gametes to the next generation is a long-standing question that remains unanswered. Here, by developing a highly sensitive approach, STAR ChIP–seq, we provide a panoramic view of the landscape of H3K4me3, a histone hallmark for transcription initiation, from developing gametes to post-implantation embryos. We find that upon fertilization, extensive reprogramming occurs on the paternal genome, as H3K4me3 peaks are depleted in zygotes but are readily observed after major zygotic genome activation at the late two-cell stage. On the maternal genome, we unexpectedly find a non-canonical form of H3K4me3 (ncH3K4me3) in full-grown and mature oocytes, which exists as broad peaks at promoters and a large number of distal loci. Such broad H3K4me3 peaks are in contrast to the typical sharp H3K4me3 peaks restricted to CpG-rich regions of promoters. Notably, ncH3K4me3 in oocytes overlaps almost exclusively with partially methylated DNA domains. It is then inherited in pre-implantation embryos, before being erased in the late two-cell embryos, when canonical H3K4me3 starts to be established. The removal of ncH3K4me3 requires zygotic transcription but is independent of DNA replication-mediated passive dilution. Finally, downregulation of H3K4me3 in full-grown oocytes by overexpression of the H3K4me3 demethylase KDM5B is associated with defects in genome silencing. Taken together, these data unveil inheritance and highly dynamic reprogramming of the epigenome in early mammalian development.
Nature | 2017
Zhenhai Du; Hui Zheng; Bo Huang; Rui Ma; Jingyi Wu; Xianglin Zhang; Jing He; Yunlong Xiang; Qiujun Wang; Yuanyuan Li; Jing Ma; Xu Zhang; Ke Zhang; Yang Wang; Michael Q. Zhang; Juntao Gao; Jesse R. Dixon; Xiaowo Wang; Jianyang Zeng; Wei Xie
In mammals, chromatin organization undergoes drastic reprogramming after fertilization. However, the three-dimensional structure of chromatin and its reprogramming in preimplantation development remain poorly understood. Here, by developing a low-input Hi-C (genome-wide chromosome conformation capture) approach, we examined the reprogramming of chromatin organization during early development in mice. We found that oocytes in metaphase II show homogeneous chromatin folding that lacks detectable topologically associating domains (TADs) and chromatin compartments. Strikingly, chromatin shows greatly diminished higher-order structure after fertilization. Unexpectedly, the subsequent establishment of chromatin organization is a prolonged process that extends through preimplantation development, as characterized by slow consolidation of TADs and segregation of chromatin compartments. The two sets of parental chromosomes are spatially separated from each other and display distinct compartmentalization in zygotes. Such allele separation and allelic compartmentalization can be found as late as the 8-cell stage. Finally, we show that chromatin compaction in preimplantation embryos can partially proceed in the absence of zygotic transcription and is a multi-level hierarchical process. Taken together, our data suggest that chromatin may exist in a markedly relaxed state after fertilization, followed by progressive maturation of higher-order chromatin architecture during early development.
Molecular Cell | 2016
Wenhao Zhang; Weikun Xia; Qiujun Wang; Aaron J. Towers; Jiayu Chen; Rui Gao; Yu Zhang; Chia-an Yen; Ah Young Lee; Yuanyuan Li; Chen Zhou; Kaili Liu; Jing Zhang; Tian-Peng Gu; Xiuqi Chen; Zai Chang; Danny Leung; Shaorong Gao; Yong-hui Jiang; Wei Xie
The methylcytosine oxidase TET proteins play important roles in DNA demethylation and development. However, it remains elusive how exactly they target substrates and execute oxidation. Interestingly, we found that, in mice, the full-length TET1 isoform (TET1e) is restricted to early embryos, embryonic stem cells (ESCs), and primordial germ cells (PGCs). By contrast, a short isoform (TET1s) is preferentially expressed in somatic cells, which lacks the N terminus including the CXXC domain, a DNA-binding module that often recognizes CpG islands (CGIs) where TET1 predominantly occupies. Unexpectedly, TET1s can still bind CGIs despite the fact that its global chromatin binding is significantly reduced. Interestingly, global chromatin binding, but not targeted binding at CGIs, is correlated with TET1-mediated demethylation. Finally, mice with exclusive expression of Tet1s failed to erase imprints in PGCs and displayed developmental defects in progeny. These data show that isoform switch of TET1 regulates epigenetic memory erasure and mouse development.
Nature Genetics | 2018
Yu Zhang; Yunlong Xiang; Qiangzong Yin; Zhenhai Du; Xu Peng; Qiujun Wang; Miguel Fidalgo; Weikun Xia; Yuanyuan Li; Zhen-ao Zhao; Wenhao Zhang; Jing Ma; Feng Xu; Jianlong Wang; Lei Li; Wei Xie
In mammals, all somatic development originates from lineage segregation in early embryos. However, the dynamics of transcriptomes and epigenomes acting in concert with initial cell fate commitment remains poorly characterized. Here we report a comprehensive investigation of transcriptomes and base-resolution methylomes for early lineages in peri- and postimplantation mouse embryos. We found allele-specific and lineage-specific de novo methylation at CG and CH sites that led to differential methylation between embryonic and extraembryonic lineages at promoters of lineage regulators, gene bodies, and DNA-methylation valleys. By using Hi-C experiments to define chromatin architecture across the same developmental period, we demonstrated that both global demethylation and remethylation in early development correlate with chromatin compartments. Dynamic local methylation was evident during gastrulation, which enabled the identification of putative regulatory elements. Finally, we found that de novo methylation patterning does not strictly require implantation. These data reveal dynamic transcriptomes, DNA methylomes, and 3D chromatin landscapes during the earliest stages of mammalian lineage specification.Transcriptome, DNA methylome and Hi-C profiling of peri- and post-implantation mouse cell lineages identified allele- and lineage-specific methylation patterns. Global demethylation and remethylation correlate with megabase chromatin compartments.
RSC Advances | 2016
YuanYu Wang; Qiujun Wang; J.H. Li; Bao-Di Liu
For the family of Cu–Ni–Ti (Zr, Hf) systems, which are promising for obtaining bulk metallic glasses, glass formation regions were calculated based on the extended Miedema’s model and Alonso’s method. It is found that the calculated glass formation regions of the Cu–Ni–Zr and Cu–Ni–Hf systems agree well with experimental results, whereas it does not for the Cu–Ni–Ti system. The composition dependence of the glass forming ability in the Cu–Ni–Ti (Zr, Hf) systems were then predicted, and it turns out that the glass forming ability of the Cu–Ni–Ti system largely deviates from the experimental results, from which it is assumed that kinetic factors (low liquidus temperature) instead of thermodynamic factors cause the Cu-rich composition to easily form glass in the Cu–Ni–Ti system. Meanwhile, the effect of Ti (Zr, Hf) on the glass forming ability was discussed in terms of the mixing enthalpy and atomic size effect.
Molecular Cell | 2016
Hui Zheng; Bo Huang; Bingjie Zhang; Yunlong Xiang; Zhenhai Du; Qianhua Xu; Yuanyuan Li; Qiujun Wang; Jing Ma; Xu Peng; Feng Xu; Wei Xie
Nature | 2018
Jingyi Wu; Jiawei Xu; Bofeng Liu; Guidong Yao; Peizhe Wang; Zili Lin; Bo Huang; X.-B. Wang; Tong Li; Senlin Shi; Nan Zhang; Fuyu Duan; Jia Ming; Xiangyang Zhang; Wenbin Niu; Wenyan Song; Haixia Jin; Yihong Guo; Shanjun Dai; Linli Hu; Lanlan Fang; Qiujun Wang; Yuanyuan Li; Wei Li; Jie Na; Wei Xie; Yingpu Sun
Genome Biology | 2018
Yuanyuan Li; Hui Zheng; Qiujun Wang; Chen Zhou; Lei Wei; Xuehui Liu; Wenhao Zhang; Yu Zhang; Zhenhai Du; Xiaowo Wang; Wei Xie
Nature | 2018
Jingyi Wu; Jiawei Xu; Bofeng Liu; Guidong Yao; Peizhe Wang; Zili Lin; Bo Huang; X.-B. Wang; Tong Li; Senlin Shi; Nan Zhang; Fuyu Duan; Jia Ming; Xiangyang Zhang; Wenbin Niu; Wenyan Song; Haixia Jin; Yihong Guo; Shanjun Dai; Linli Hu; Lanlan Fang; Qiujun Wang; Yuanyuan Li; Wei Li; Jie Na; Wei Xie; Yingpu Sun