Selected Grantee Publications
MIC-Drop: A Platform for Large-scale In Vivo CRISPR Screens
Parvez et al., Science. 2021.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34413171/
CRISPR screens in animals are challenging because generating, validating, and keeping track of large numbers of mutant animals is prohibitive. These authors introduce Multiplexed Intermixed CRISPR Droplets (MIC-Drop), a platform combining droplet microfluidics, single-needle en masse CRISPR ribonucleoprotein injections, and DNA barcoding to enable large-scale functional genetic screens in zebrafish. In one application, they showed that MIC-Drop could identify small-molecule targets. Furthermore, in a MIC-Drop screen of 188 poorly characterized genes, they discovered several genes important for cardiac development and function. With the potential to scale to thousands of genes, MIC-Drop enables genome-scale reverse genetic screens in model organisms. Supported by ORIP (R24OD017870), NIGMS, and NHLBI.
Deploying MMEJ using MENdel in Precision Gene Editing Applications for Gene Therapy and Functional Genomics
Martínez-Gálvez et al., Nucleic Acids Research. 2021.
https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/49/1/67/6030233
Gene-editing experiments commonly elicit the error-prone non-homologous end joining for DNA double-strand break (DSB) repair. Martinez-Galvez et al. compared three DSB repair prediction algorithms - MENTHU, inDelphi, and Lindel. MENTHU correctly identified 46% of all PreMAs available, a ∼2- and ∼60-fold sensitivity increase compared to inDelphi and Lindel, respectively. The investigators report the new algorithm MENdel, a combination of MENTHU and Lindel, that achieves the most predictive coverage of homogeneous out-of-frame mutations. They suggest that the use of MENdel helps researchers use MMEJ at scale for reverse genetics screenings to be viable for nearly all loss-of-function based gene editing therapeutic applications. Supported by ORIP (R24OD020166) and NIGMS.