Selected Grantee Publications
Commentary: The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium: High-Throughput In Vivo Functional Annotation of the Mammalian Genome
Lloyd, Mammalian Genome. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39254744
The International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium (IMPC), a collectively governed consortium of 21 academic research institutions across 15 countries on 5 continents, represents a groundbreaking approach in genetics and biomedical research. Its goal is to create a comprehensive catalog of mammalian gene function that is freely available and equally accessible to the global research community. So far, the IMPC has uncovered the function of thousands of genes about which little was previously known. By 2027, when the current round of funding expires, the IMPC will have produced and phenotyped nearly 12,000 knockout mouse lines representing approximately 60% of the human orthologous genome in mice. This new knowledge has produced numerous insights about the role of genes in health and disease, including informing the genetic basis of rare diseases and positing gene product influences on common diseases. However, as IMPC nears the end of the current funding cycle, its path forward remains unclear. Supported by ORIP (UM1OD023221).
A Single-Cell Time-Lapse of Mouse Prenatal Development From Gastrula to Birth
Qiu et al., Nature. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38355799/
In this study, investigators combined single-cell transcriptome profiling of male and female mouse embryos and newborn pups with previously published data to construct a tree of cell-type relationships tracing development from zygote to birth. They applied optimized single-cell combinatorial indexing to profile the transcriptional states of 12.4 million nuclei from 83 embryos, precisely staged at 2- to 6-hour intervals spanning late gastrulation to birth; establish a global framework for exploring mammalian development; and construct a rooted tree of cell-type relationships, from zygote to birth. Their analysis allowed them to systematically nominate genes that encode transcription factors and other proteins as candidate drivers of the in vivo differentiation of hundreds of cell types. Extending this framework to postnatal time points could yield a single-cell time-lapse of the entire mammalian life span, from conception to death. Supported by ORIP (UM1OD023222) and NHGRI.