Pitfalls in single clone crispr-cas9 mutagenesis to fine-map regulatory intervals

Ruoyu Tian, Yidan Pan, Thomas H.A. Etheridge, Harshavardhan Deshmukh, Dalia Gulick, Greg Gibson, Gang Bao, Ciaran M. Lee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

The majority of genetic variants affecting complex traits map to regulatory regions of genes, and typically lie in credible intervals of 100 or more SNPs. Fine mapping of the causal variant(s) at a locus depends on assays that are able to discriminate the effects of polymorphisms or mutations on gene expression. Here, we evaluated a moderate-throughput CRISPR-Cas9 mutagenesis approach, based on replicated measurement of transcript abundance in single-cell clones, by deleting candidate regulatory SNPs, affecting four genes known to be affected by large-effect expression Quantitative Trait Loci (eQTL) in leukocytes, and using Fluidigm qRT-PCR to monitor gene expression in HL60 pro-myeloid human cells. We concluded that there were multiple constraints that rendered the approach generally infeasible for fine mapping. These included the non-targetability of many regulatory SNPs, clonal variability of single-cell derivatives, and expense. Power calculations based on the measured variance attributable to major sources of experimental error indicated that typical eQTL explaining 10% of the variation in expression of a gene would usually require at least eight biological replicates of each clone. Scanning across credible intervals with this approach is not recommended.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number504
JournalGenes
Volume11
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • CRISPR-Cas9
  • EQTL
  • Fine-mapping
  • Power
  • Single-cell clone

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics
  • Genetics(clinical)

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