| Literature DB >> 35022620 |
David Feldman1,2, Luke Funk1,3, Anna Le1,4, Rebecca J Carlson1,3, Michael D Leiken1, FuNien Tsai1,5, Brian Soong1, Avtar Singh1,6, Paul C Blainey7,8,9.
Abstract
Discovery of the genetic components underpinning fundamental and disease-related processes is being rapidly accelerated by combining efficient, programmable genetic engineering with phenotypic readouts of high spatial, temporal and/or molecular resolution. Microscopy is a fundamental tool for studying cell biology, but its lack of high-throughput sequence readouts hinders integration in large-scale genetic screens. Optical pooled screens using in situ sequencing provide massively scalable integration of barcoded lentiviral libraries (e.g., CRISPR perturbation libraries) with high-content imaging assays, including dynamic processes in live cells. The protocol uses standard lentiviral vectors and molecular biology, providing single-cell resolution of phenotype and engineered genotype, scalability to millions of cells and accurate sequence reads sufficient to distinguish >106 perturbations. In situ amplification takes ~2 d, while sequencing can be performed in ~1.5 h per cycle. The image analysis pipeline provided enables fully parallel automated sequencing analysis using a cloud or cluster computing environment.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35022620 DOI: 10.1038/s41596-021-00653-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Protoc ISSN: 1750-2799 Impact factor: 17.021