| Literature DB >> 28077953 |
Maximilian Billmann1, Michael Boutros2.
Abstract
Genetic screens have identified many novel components of various biological processes, such as components required for cell cycle and cell division. While forward genetic screens typically generate unstructured 'hit' lists, genetic interaction mapping approaches can identify functional relations in a systematic fashion. Here, we discuss a recent study by our group demonstrating a two-step approach to first screen for regulators of the mitotic cell cycle, and subsequently guide hypothesis generation by using genetic interaction analysis. The screen used a high-content microscopy assay and automated image analysis to capture defects during mitotic progression and cytokinesis. Genetic interaction networks derived from process-specific features generate a snapshot of functional gene relations in those processes, which follow a temporal order during the cell cycle. This complements a recently published approach, which inferred directional genetic interactions reconstructing hierarchical relationships between genes across different phases during mitotic progression. In conclusion, this strategy leverages unbiased, genome-wide, yet highly sensitive and process-focused functional screening in cells.Entities:
Keywords: Cell cycle; Genetic interactions; Image analysis; RNAi
Year: 2017 PMID: 28077953 PMCID: PMC5223360 DOI: 10.1186/s13008-016-0028-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Div ISSN: 1747-1028 Impact factor: 5.130
Fig. 1Schematic illustration of a cell progressing through mitosis and cytokinesis. Mitotic arrest or a cytokinesis defect can be introduced by depleting genes involved in mitotic progression or cytokinesis and cause visual changes that can be measured using markers for mitotic chromosomes (red) or total DNA (blue)
Fig. 2Genetic interactions specifically affect distinct phenotypic features. Example showing that the image-derived feature cell count did not reconstruct the genetic interaction, but the fraction of mitotic cells (mitotic index) provided this information. Figure was modified from [33]
Fig. 3Temporal resolution of genetic interaction networks and genome-scale process-specific functional association of gene function. The epistatic relations between functional modules are reconstructed based on directed genetic interactions inferred from multi-feature genetic interaction profiles. The networks present functional relations as inferred from correlations between process-specific, single feature-focused genetic interaction profiles
Fig. 4Two-step screening approach to prioritize candidate genes from multi-parametric genome-wide functional screens (left), and functionally relate them by genetic interaction analysis (middle, right)