gene perturbation
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhisong He ◽  
Ashley Maynard ◽  
Akanksha Jain ◽  
Tobias Gerber ◽  
Rebecca Petri ◽  
...  

AbstractInduced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived organoids provide models to study human organ development. Single-cell transcriptomics enable highly resolved descriptions of cell states within these systems; however, approaches are needed to directly measure lineage relationships. Here we establish iTracer, a lineage recorder that combines reporter barcodes with inducible CRISPR–Cas9 scarring and is compatible with single-cell and spatial transcriptomics. We apply iTracer to explore clonality and lineage dynamics during cerebral organoid development and identify a time window of fate restriction as well as variation in neurogenic dynamics between progenitor neuron families. We also establish long-term four-dimensional light-sheet microscopy for spatial lineage recording in cerebral organoids and confirm regional clonality in the developing neuroepithelium. We incorporate gene perturbation (iTracer-perturb) and assess the effect of mosaic TSC2 mutations on cerebral organoid development. Our data shed light on how lineages and fates are established during cerebral organoid formation. More broadly, our techniques can be adapted in any iPSC-derived culture system to dissect lineage alterations during normal or perturbed development.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dawei Sun ◽  
Lewis Evans ◽  
Francesca Perrone ◽  
Vanesa Sokleva ◽  
Kyungtae Lim ◽  
...  

Human organoid systems recapitulate key features of organs offering platforms for modelling developmental biology and disease. Tissue-derived organoids have been widely used to study the impact of extrinsic niche factors on stem cells. However, they are rarely used to study endogenous gene function due to the lack of efficient gene manipulation tools. Previously, we established a human foetal lung organoid system (Nikolić et al., 2017). Here, using this organoid system as an example we have systematically developed and optimised a complete genetic toolbox for use in tissue-derived organoids. This includes 'Organoid Easytag' our efficient workflow for targeting all types of gene loci through CRISPR-mediated homologous recombination followed by flow cytometry for enriching correctly-targeted cells. Our toolbox also incorporates conditional gene knock-down or overexpression using tightly-inducible CRISPR interference and CRISPR activation which is the first efficient application of these techniques to tissue-derived organoids. These tools will facilitate gene perturbation studies in tissue-derived organoids facilitating human disease modelling and providing a functional counterpart to many on-going descriptive studies, such as the Human Cell Atlas Project.


2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Artemis Iatrou ◽  
Eric M. Clark ◽  
Yanling Wang

AbstractIn response to extracellular and intracellular stressors, the nucleus and nuclear compartments undergo distinct molecular changes to maintain cell homeostasis. In the context of Alzheimer’s disease, misfolded proteins and various cellular stressors lead to profound structural and molecular changes at the nucleus. This review summarizes recent research on nuclear alterations in AD development, from the nuclear envelope changes to chromatin and epigenetic regulation and then to common nuclear stress responses. Finally, we provide our thoughts on the importance of understanding cell-type-specific changes and identifying upstream causal events in AD pathogenesis and highlight novel sequencing and gene perturbation technologies to address those challenges.


eLife ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W Coukos ◽  
David Yao ◽  
Mateo Lopez Sanchez ◽  
Eric T Strand ◽  
Meagan E Olive ◽  
...  

The trafficking of specific protein cohorts to correct subcellular locations at correct times is essential for every signaling and regulatory process in biology. Gene perturbation screens could provide a powerful approach to probe the molecular mechanisms of protein trafficking, but only if protein localization or mislocalization can be tied to a simple and robust phenotype for cell selection, such as cell proliferation or fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). To empower the study of protein trafficking processes with gene perturbation, we developed a genetically-encoded molecular tool named HiLITR. HiLITR converts protein colocalization into proteolytic release of a membrane-anchored transcription factor, which drives the expression of a chosen reporter gene. Using HiLITR in combination with FACS-based CRISPRi screening in human cell lines, we identified genes that influence the trafficking of mitochondrial and ER tail-anchored proteins. We show that loss of the SUMO E1 component SAE1 results in mislocalization and destabilization of many mitochondrial tail-anchored proteins. We also demonstrate a distinct regulatory role for EMC10 in the ER membrane complex, opposing the transmembrane-domain insertion activity of the complex. Through transcriptional integration of complex cellular functions, HiLITR expands the scope of biological processes that can be studied by genetic perturbation screening technologies.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenke Liu ◽  
Xuya Wang ◽  
D R Mani ◽  
David Fenyo

Cell line perturbation data could be utilized as a reference for inferring underlying molecular processes in new gene expression profiles. It is important to develop accurate and computationally efficient algorithms to exploit biological knowledge in the growing compendium of existing perturbation data and harness these for new predictions. We reframed the problem of inferring possible gene perturbation based on a reference perturbation database into a classification task and evaluated the application of deep neural network models to address this problem. Our results showed that a fully-connected multi-layer neural network was able to achieve up to 74.9% accuracy in a holdout test set, but the model generalizability was limited by consistency between training and testing data. Capacity and flexibility enables neural network models to efficiently represent transcriptomic features associated with single gene knockdown perturbations. With consistent signals between training and testing sets, neural networks may be trained to classify new samples to experimentally confirmed molecular phenotypes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hélène Choquet ◽  
Ronald B. Melles ◽  
Deepti Anand ◽  
Jie Yin ◽  
Gabriel Cuellar-Partida ◽  
...  

AbstractCataract is the leading cause of blindness among the elderly worldwide and cataract surgery is one of the most common operations performed in the United States. As the genetic etiology of cataract formation remains unclear, we conducted a multiethnic genome-wide association meta-analysis, combining results from the GERA and UK Biobank cohorts, and tested for replication in the 23andMe research cohort. We report 54 genome-wide significant loci, 37 of which were novel. Sex-stratified analyses identified CASP7 as an additional novel locus specific to women. We show that genes within or near 80% of the cataract-associated loci are significantly expressed and/or enriched-expressed in the mouse lens across various spatiotemporal stages as per iSyTE analysis. Furthermore, iSyTE shows 32 candidate genes in the associated loci have altered gene expression in 9 different gene perturbation mouse models of lens defects/cataract, suggesting their relevance to lens biology. Our work provides further insight into the complex genetic architecture of cataract susceptibility.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W Coukos ◽  
David Yao ◽  
Mateo Lopez Sanchez ◽  
Eric T Strand ◽  
Jonathan S. Weissman ◽  
...  

The trafficking of specific protein cohorts to the correct subcellular location at the correct time is essential for every signaling and regulatory process in biology. Gene perturbation screens could provide a powerful approach to probe the molecular mechanisms of protein trafficking, but only if protein localization or mislocalization can be tied to a simple and robust phenotype for cell selection, such as cell proliferation or FACS. To broadly empower the study of protein trafficking processes with gene perturbation, we developed a genetically-encoded molecular tool named HiLITR. HiLITR converts protein colocalization into proteolytic release of a membrane-anchored transcription factor, which drives the expression of a chosen reporter gene. Using HiLITR in combination with FACS-based CRISPRi screening in human cell lines, we identify genes that influence the trafficking of mitochondrial and ER tail-anchored proteins. We show that loss of the SUMO E1 component SAE1 results in the mislocalization and destabilization of mitochondrial tail-anchored proteins. We also demonstrate a distinct regulatory role for EMC10 in the ER membrane complex, opposing the transmembrane-domain insertion activity of the complex. Through transcriptional integration of complex cellular functions, HiLITR expands the scope of biological processes that can be studied by genetic perturbation screening technologies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicole M. Sodir ◽  
Luca Pellegrinet ◽  
Roderik M. Kortlever ◽  
Yong-Won Kwon ◽  
Shinseog Kim ◽  
...  

AbstractMyc+/− haploinsufficient mice and mice with deleted Myc enhancers express reduced levels of the pleiotropic transcription factor Myc. Such mice are viable, with relatively mild pathologies, but show delay in onset of certain cancers. However, many phenotypes arising from germline gene perturbation are indirect consequences of adaptive developmental compensation and so do not translate to equivalent phenotypes when applied to adults. To ascertain whether systemic Myc hypomorphism also conferred cancer protection when acutely imposed in adults, and what the side-effects of this might be, we constructed a genetically engineered mouse model in which Myc expression may be systemically and reversibly hypomorphed at will. Acute imposition of Myc hypomorphism in adult mice conferred potent protection against both KRasG12D-driven lung and pancreatic cancers yet elicited only mild haematopoietic side effects. These side effects were completely suppressed by imposing Myc hypomorphism metronomically – a regimen that nonetheless retained potent cancer prophylaxis. Our data identify a key bottleneck at the transition from pre-malignant hyperplasia to overt tumour that is peculiarly reliant on levels of Myc that are higher than those required for most adult physiology, offering a possible window of opportunity for Myc inhibition in cancer prophylaxis.


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