High-content analysis screening for cell cycle regulators using arrayed synthetic crRNA libraries

•First use of arrayed, synthetic crRNAs in a multiparametric gene knockout screen.•High-content analysis was used to identify hits in a cell cycle reporter assay.•7 experimental parameters measured in live cells to classify cell into 6 categories.•Hit stratification: target gene expression, indel fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of biotechnology 2017-06, Vol.251, p.189-200
Hauptverfasser: Strezoska, Žaklina, Perkett, Matthew R., Chou, Eldon T., Maksimova, Elena, Anderson, Emily M., McClelland, Shawn, Kelley, Melissa L., Vermeulen, Annaleen, Smith, Anja van Brabant
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•First use of arrayed, synthetic crRNAs in a multiparametric gene knockout screen.•High-content analysis was used to identify hits in a cell cycle reporter assay.•7 experimental parameters measured in live cells to classify cell into 6 categories.•Hit stratification: target gene expression, indel formation, and gene knockdown.•3 or 4 out of 4 crRNAs confirm the phenotype for most gene target hits. The CRISPR-Cas9 system has been utilized for large-scale, loss-of-function screens mainly using lentiviral pooled formats and cell-survival phenotypic assays. Screening in an arrayed format expands the types of phenotypic readouts that can be used to now include high-content, morphology-based assays, and with the recent availability of synthetic crRNA libraries, new studies are emerging. Here, we use a cell cycle reporter cell line to perform an arrayed, synthetic crRNA:tracrRNA screen targeting 169 genes (>600 crRNAs) and used high content analysis (HCA) to identify genes that regulate the cell cycle. Seven parameters were used to classify cells into cell cycle categories and multiple parameters were combined using a new analysis technique to identify hits. Comprehensive hit follow-up experiments included target gene expression analysis, confirmation of DNA insertions/deletions, and validation with orthogonal reagents. Our results show that most hits had three or more independent crRNAs per gene that demonstrated a phenotype with consistent individual parameters, indicating that our screen produced high-confidence hits with low off-target effects and allowed us to identify hits with more subtle phenotypes. The results of our screen demonstrate the power of using arrayed, synthetic crRNAs for functional phenotypic screening using multiparameter HCA assays.
ISSN:0168-1656
1873-4863
DOI:10.1016/j.jbiotec.2017.04.017