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Mapping the Genetic Landscape of Human Cells
Author(s) -
Max A. Horlbeck,
Albert Xu,
Min Wang,
Neal K. Bennett,
Chong Y. Park,
Derek Bogdanoff,
Britt Adamson,
Eric D. Chow,
Martin Kampmann,
Timothy R. Peterson,
Ken Nakamura,
Michael A. Fischbach,
Jonathan S. Weissman,
Luke A. Gilbert
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2018.06.010
Subject(s) - biology , gene mapping , computational biology , gene , function (biology) , genetics , crispr , human cell , chromosome
Seminal yeast studies have established the value of comprehensively mapping genetic interactions (GIs) for inferring gene function. Efforts in human cells using focused gene sets underscore the utility of this approach, but the feasibility of generating large-scale, diverse human GI maps remains unresolved. We developed a CRISPR interference platform for large-scale quantitative mapping of human GIs. We systematically perturbed 222,784 gene pairs in two cancer cell lines. The resultant maps cluster functionally related genes, assigning function to poorly characterized genes, including TMEM261, a new electron transport chain component. Individual GIs pinpoint unexpected relationships between pathways, exemplified by a specific cholesterol biosynthesis intermediate whose accumulation induces deoxynucleotide depletion, causing replicative DNA damage and a synthetic-lethal interaction with the ATR/9-1-1 DNA repair pathway. Our map provides a broad resource, establishes GI maps as a high-resolution tool for dissecting gene function, and serves as a blueprint for mapping the genetic landscape of human cells.

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