Publication | Open Access
Mapping information-rich genotype-phenotype landscapes with genome-scale Perturb-seq
78
Citations
57
References
2021
Year
Unknown Venue
GeneticsMolecular GeneticsGenomicsTranscriptional RegulationGenotype-phenotype AssociationMolecular EcologySingle Cell SequencingCell DevelopmentGenotype-phenotype MapCrisprVariant InterpretationSingle-cell GenomicsGenome EditingGene ExpressionPopulation GeneticsFunctional GenomicsCell BiologyInformation-rich Genotype-phenotype LandscapesNatural SciencesMitochondrial RespirationGene EditingPopulation GenomicsMedicineCrispr Interference
Abstract A central goal of genetics is to define the relationships between genotypes and phenotypes. High-content phenotypic screens such as Perturb-seq (pooled CRISPR-based screens with single-cell RNA-sequencing readouts) enable massively parallel functional genomic mapping but, to date, have been used at limited scales. Here, we perform genome-scale Perturb-seq targeting all expressed genes with CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) across >2.5 million human cells and present a framework to power biological discovery with the resulting genotype-phenotype map. We use transcriptional phenotypes to predict the function of poorly-characterized genes, uncovering new regulators of ribosome biogenesis (including CCDC86 , ZNF236 , and SPATA5L1 ), transcription ( C7orf26 ), and mitochondrial respiration ( TMEM242 ). In addition to assigning gene function, single-cell transcriptional phenotypes allow for in-depth dissection of complex cellular phenomena – from RNA processing to differentiation. We leverage this ability to systematically identify the genetic drivers and consequences of aneuploidy and to discover an unanticipated layer of stress-specific regulation of the mitochondrial genome. Our information-rich genotype-phenotype map reveals a multidimensional portrait of gene function and cellular behavior.
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