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  • The symmetric inheritance of histone modifications by the nascent chromatin fibers during DNA replication is essential for proper developmental progression. Two new studies using mouse embryonic stem cells further illuminate the role of histone inheritance in early cell fate decisions.

    • Luis Altamirano-Pacheco
    • Pablo Navarro
    News & Views
  • In this issue of Nature Genetics, Lara-Astiaso et al. systematically characterized the functional roles of several chromatin factors in hematopoiesis by combining functional CRISPR screens with single-cell transcriptomics and chromatin accessibility profiling, revealing lineage biases and relationships with important transcription factors.

    • Llorenç Solé-Boldo
    • Simon Haas
    News & Views
  • A novel pipeline that expands the utility of the protein language model ESM1b has provided variant effect predictions for more than 40,000 protein isoforms. This strategy outperformed several state-of-the-art methods over multiple benchmarks.

    • Benjamin J. Livesey
    • Joseph A. Marsh
    News & Views
  • Identifying genetic risk factors for binge-eating disorder (BED) is vital to understand its etiology and develop effective prevention and intervention strategies. To overcome under-reporting of clinical BED diagnosis, a new study uses machine learning to identify genetic variants associated with quantitative BED risk scores and finds evidence for a pathological role of heme metabolism.

    • Jackson G. Thorp
    • Zachary F. Gerring
    • Eske M. Derks
    News & Views
  • Incidence of keratinocyte skin cancer varies markedly between populations living in different areas of the world. A detailed analysis of somatic mutations in the normal skin of individuals from the UK and Singapore reveals different patterns of clonal mutational landscapes that could contribute to differential risk.

    • Marco De Dominici
    • James DeGregori
    News & Views
  • The three-dimensional organization of mammalian chromosomes can regulate transcription. Whether transcription itself influences genome structure has remained a source of debate. Using sensitive genome-wide readouts, two recent studies describe the involvement of transcription on genome architecture by different mechanisms.

    • Daan Noordermeer
    News & Views
  • Identifying the ways that a study sample is not representative is essential for maximizing the generalizability of findings to the population. A new method proposes discerning non-representativeness in large-scale genetic studies by comparing the genotypes of closely related participants.

    • Mark J. Adams
    News & Views
  • Single large-scale mitochondrial DNA deletions cause a spectrum of disease with differing severities and tissue expressivity. Quantification of single-cell deletion levels with multi-modal cellular readouts provides insights into hematopoietic cell fate and disease manifestation.

    • Sarah J. Pickett
    • Gavin Hudson
    • Laura C. Greaves
    News & Views
  • Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of type 2 diabetes have identified few loci connected to muscle biology. A GWAS of post-glucose-challenge measures of insulin has now identified loci related to insulin resistance and GLUT4 regulation in skeletal muscle, illustrating the benefit of studying dynamic glycemic measures.

    • Miriam S. Udler
    News & Views
  • Two studies describe kinase fusion proteins (KFPs) that regulate the perception and deception of wheat pathogens. These highlight the emergence of KFPs as plant immune regulators and emphasize the importance of crop wild relatives as a reservoir for resistance breeding and global food security.

    • Tzion Fahima
    • Gitta Coaker
    News & Views
  • Tumors develop mechanisms to escape immune destruction. A systematic analysis of large genome sequencing datasets shows that one in four tumors develop genetic immune escape and its prevalence is remarkably similar between primary and metastatic tumors, suggesting that immune escape is an early event during tumor evolution.

    • Jimmy Van den Eynden
    News & Views
  • Specific chromatin features, especially histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation, are widely used to identify active enhancers, yet current methods are imprecise. New work suggests that histone H2B N terminus multisite lysine acetylation (H2BNTac) is a notable signature of active enhancers and could substantially improve enhancer prediction.

    • Chang Huang
    • Kristian Helin
    News & Views
  • A study uses single-cell RNA sequencing to profile human papillomavirus (HPV)-positive and -negative oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma, revealing considerable diversity within and between tumors. Within HPV-positive tumors, subsets of malignant cells are found with undetectable HPV expression and decreased HPV-related phenotypes, which may influence prognosis and response to therapy.

    • David J. Peace
    • Evgeny Izumchenko
    • David Sidransky
    News & Views
  • Telomere length is an important determinant of cellular aging and disease risk, but the genetics of telomere length control in humans is unclear. A genome-wide CRISPR screen has now identified a central role for thymidine nucleotide metabolism in the regulation of telomere length, which has implications for the diagnosis and treatment of disease.

    • Tracy M. Bryan
    News & Views
  • Quantifying whether different populations share similar effect sizes of common causal variants is vital to understand the genetic basis of disease and build better prediction models. A new study proposes a method leveraging admixture to estimate the correlation of causal genetic variants and finds they are largely similar across ancestry backgrounds.

    • Elizabeth G. Atkinson
    News & Views
  • Current risk assessment and treatment strategies for venous thromboembolism (VTE) consider genetic factors only in a limited way. New work shows a more pervasive role of common variants in VTE risk, inspiring genetic predictors that surpass and complement individual clinical risk factors and monogenic thrombophilia testing.

    • Michael Chong
    • Guillaume Paré
    News & Views
  • Multi-omic profiling of lesions at autopsy reveals a plethora of resistance mechanisms present within individual patients with ovarian cancer. This highlights the extreme challenge faced in treating end-stage disease and underscores the need for new methods of early detection and intervention.

    • Barbara Hernando
    • Geoff Macintyre
    News & Views