scholarly journals Fluorescence-Based Phenotypic Selection Allows Forward Genetic Screens in Haploid Human Cells

PLoS ONE ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. e39651 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lidia M. Duncan ◽  
Richard T. Timms ◽  
Eszter Zavodszky ◽  
Florencia Cano ◽  
Gordon Dougan ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Andres M. Lebensohn ◽  
Ramin Dubey ◽  
Leif R. Neitzel ◽  
Ofelia Tacchelly ◽  
Caleb D. Marceau ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth R. Cebul ◽  
Ian G. McLachlan ◽  
Maxwell G. Heiman

ABSTRACTDendrites develop elaborate morphologies in concert with surrounding glia, but the molecules that coordinate dendrite and glial morphogenesis are mostly unknown.C. elegansoffers a powerful model for identifying such factors. Previous work in this system examined dendrites and glia that develop within epithelia, similar to mammalian sense organs. Here, we focus on the neurons BAG and URX, which are not part of an epithelium but instead form membranous attachments to a single glial cell at the nose, reminiscent of dendrite-glia contacts in the mammalian brain. We show that these dendrites develop by retrograde extension, in which the nascent dendrite endings anchor to the presumptive nose and then extend by stretch during embryo elongation. Using forward genetic screens, we find that dendrite development requires the adhesion protein SAX-7/L1CAM and the cytoplasmic protein GRDN-1/CCDC88C to anchor dendrite endings at the nose. SAX-7 acts in neurons and glia, while GRDN-1 acts in glia to non-autonomously promote dendrite extension. Thus, this work shows how glial factors can help to shape dendrites, and identifies a novel molecular mechanism for dendrite growth by retrograde extension.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kendall R Sanson ◽  
Peter C DeWeirdt ◽  
Annabel K Sangree ◽  
Ruth E Hanna ◽  
Mudra Hegde ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTCas12a enzymes have attractive properties for scalable delivery of multiplexed perturbations, yet widespread usage has lagged behind Cas9-based strategies. Here we describe the optimization of Cas12a from Acidaminococcus (AsCas12a) for use in pooled genetic screens in human cells. By assaying the activity of thousands of guides, we confirm on-target design rules and extend them to an enhanced activity variant, enAsCas12a. We also develop the first comprehensive set of off-target rules for Cas12a, and demonstrate that we can predict and exclude promiscuous guides. Finally, to enable efficient higher-order multiplexing via lentiviral delivery, we screen thousands of direct repeat variants and identify 38 that outperform the wildtype sequence. We validate this optimized AsCas12a toolkit by targeting 12 synthetic lethal gene pairs with up to 400 guide pairs each, and demonstrate effective triple knockout via flow cytometry. These results establish AsCas12a as a robust system for combinatorial applications of CRISPR technology.


mSphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Troy P. Hubbard ◽  
Jonathan D. D’Gama ◽  
Gabriel Billings ◽  
Brigid M. Davis ◽  
Matthew K. Waldor

ABSTRACT Transposon insertion sequencing (TIS) is a widely used technique for conducting genome-scale forward genetic screens in bacteria. However, few methods enable comparison of TIS data across multiple replicates of a screen or across independent screens, including screens performed in different organisms. Here, we introduce a post hoc analytic framework, comparative TIS (CompTIS), which utilizes unsupervised learning to enable meta-analysis of multiple TIS data sets. CompTIS first implements screen-level principal-component analysis (PCA) and clustering to identify variation between the TIS screens. This initial screen-level analysis facilitates the selection of related screens for additional analyses, reveals the relatedness of complex environments based on growth phenotypes measured by TIS, and provides a useful quality control step. Subsequently, PCA is performed on genes to identify loci whose corresponding mutants lead to concordant/discordant phenotypes across all or in a subset of screens. We used CompTIS to analyze published intestinal colonization TIS data sets from two vibrio species. Gene-level analyses identified both pan-vibrio genes required for intestinal colonization and conserved genes that displayed species-specific requirements. CompTIS is applicable to virtually any combination of TIS screens and can be implemented without regard to either the number of screens or the methods used for upstream data analysis. IMPORTANCE Forward genetic screens are powerful tools for functional genomics. The comparison of similar forward genetic screens performed in different organisms enables the identification of genes with similar or different phenotypes across organisms. Transposon insertion sequencing is a widely used method for conducting genome-scale forward genetic screens in bacteria, yet few bioinformatic approaches have been developed to compare the results of screen replicates and different screens conducted across species or strains. Here, we used principal-component analysis (PCA) and hierarchical clustering, two unsupervised learning approaches, to analyze the relatedness of multiple in vivo screens of pathogenic vibrios. This analytic framework reveals both shared pan-vibrio requirements for intestinal colonization and strain-specific dependencies. Our findings suggest that PCA-based analytics will be a straightforward widely applicable approach for comparing diverse transposon insertion sequencing screens.


2011 ◽  
Vol 193 (6) ◽  
pp. 956-957
Author(s):  
Caitlin Sedwick

Bilder explores epithelial form and function in Drosophila using forward genetic screens.


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