Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells

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Standard

Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells. / Jaiswal, Alok; Peddinti, Gopal; Akimov, Yevhen; Wennerberg, Krister; Kuznetsov, Sergey; Tang, Jing; Aittokallio, Tero.

I: Genome Medicine, Bind 9, Nr. 1, 01.06.2017, s. 51.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jaiswal, A, Peddinti, G, Akimov, Y, Wennerberg, K, Kuznetsov, S, Tang, J & Aittokallio, T 2017, 'Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells', Genome Medicine, bind 9, nr. 1, s. 51. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-017-0440-2

APA

Jaiswal, A., Peddinti, G., Akimov, Y., Wennerberg, K., Kuznetsov, S., Tang, J., & Aittokallio, T. (2017). Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells. Genome Medicine, 9(1), 51. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-017-0440-2

Vancouver

Jaiswal A, Peddinti G, Akimov Y, Wennerberg K, Kuznetsov S, Tang J o.a. Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells. Genome Medicine. 2017 jun. 1;9(1):51. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13073-017-0440-2

Author

Jaiswal, Alok ; Peddinti, Gopal ; Akimov, Yevhen ; Wennerberg, Krister ; Kuznetsov, Sergey ; Tang, Jing ; Aittokallio, Tero. / Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells. I: Genome Medicine. 2017 ; Bind 9, Nr. 1. s. 51.

Bibtex

@article{4649401142494c92915aa8ea0bdc525d,
title = "Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Genome-wide loss-of-function profiling is widely used for systematic identification of genetic dependencies in cancer cells; however, the poor reproducibility of RNA interference (RNAi) screens has been a major concern due to frequent off-target effects. Currently, a detailed understanding of the key factors contributing to the sub-optimal consistency is still a lacking, especially on how to improve the reliability of future RNAi screens by controlling for factors that determine their off-target propensity.METHODS: We performed a systematic, quantitative analysis of the consistency between two genome-wide shRNA screens conducted on a compendium of cancer cell lines, and also compared several gene summarization methods for inferring gene essentiality from shRNA level data. We then devised novel concepts of seed essentiality and shRNA family, based on seed region sequences of shRNAs, to study in-depth the contribution of seed-mediated off-target effects to the consistency of the two screens. We further investigated two seed-sequence properties, seed pairing stability, and target abundance in terms of their capability to minimize the off-target effects in post-screening data analysis. Finally, we applied this novel methodology to identify genetic interactions and synthetic lethal partners of cancer drivers, and confirmed differential essentiality phenotypes by detailed CRISPR/Cas9 experiments.RESULTS: Using the novel concepts of seed essentiality and shRNA family, we demonstrate how genome-wide loss-of-function profiling of a common set of cancer cell lines can be actually made fairly reproducible when considering seed-mediated off-target effects. Importantly, by excluding shRNAs having higher propensity for off-target effects, based on their seed-sequence properties, one can remove noise from the genome-wide shRNA datasets. As a translational application case, we demonstrate enhanced reproducibility of genetic interaction partners of common cancer drivers, as well as identify novel synthetic lethal partners of a major oncogenic driver, PIK3CA, supported by a complementary CRISPR/Cas9 experiment.CONCLUSIONS: We provide practical guidelines for improved design and analysis of genome-wide loss-of-function profiling and demonstrate how this novel strategy can be applied towards improved mapping of genetic dependencies of cancer cells to aid development of targeted anticancer treatments.",
keywords = "Class I Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases, Genomics, Guidelines as Topic, Humans, Models, Genetic, Neoplasms/genetics, Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases, RNA Interference, Reproducibility of Results",
author = "Alok Jaiswal and Gopal Peddinti and Yevhen Akimov and Krister Wennerberg and Sergey Kuznetsov and Jing Tang and Tero Aittokallio",
year = "2017",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1186/s13073-017-0440-2",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
pages = "51",
journal = "Genome Medicine",
issn = "1756-994X",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Seed-effect modeling improves the consistency of genome-wide loss-of-function screens and identifies synthetic lethal vulnerabilities in cancer cells

AU - Jaiswal, Alok

AU - Peddinti, Gopal

AU - Akimov, Yevhen

AU - Wennerberg, Krister

AU - Kuznetsov, Sergey

AU - Tang, Jing

AU - Aittokallio, Tero

PY - 2017/6/1

Y1 - 2017/6/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Genome-wide loss-of-function profiling is widely used for systematic identification of genetic dependencies in cancer cells; however, the poor reproducibility of RNA interference (RNAi) screens has been a major concern due to frequent off-target effects. Currently, a detailed understanding of the key factors contributing to the sub-optimal consistency is still a lacking, especially on how to improve the reliability of future RNAi screens by controlling for factors that determine their off-target propensity.METHODS: We performed a systematic, quantitative analysis of the consistency between two genome-wide shRNA screens conducted on a compendium of cancer cell lines, and also compared several gene summarization methods for inferring gene essentiality from shRNA level data. We then devised novel concepts of seed essentiality and shRNA family, based on seed region sequences of shRNAs, to study in-depth the contribution of seed-mediated off-target effects to the consistency of the two screens. We further investigated two seed-sequence properties, seed pairing stability, and target abundance in terms of their capability to minimize the off-target effects in post-screening data analysis. Finally, we applied this novel methodology to identify genetic interactions and synthetic lethal partners of cancer drivers, and confirmed differential essentiality phenotypes by detailed CRISPR/Cas9 experiments.RESULTS: Using the novel concepts of seed essentiality and shRNA family, we demonstrate how genome-wide loss-of-function profiling of a common set of cancer cell lines can be actually made fairly reproducible when considering seed-mediated off-target effects. Importantly, by excluding shRNAs having higher propensity for off-target effects, based on their seed-sequence properties, one can remove noise from the genome-wide shRNA datasets. As a translational application case, we demonstrate enhanced reproducibility of genetic interaction partners of common cancer drivers, as well as identify novel synthetic lethal partners of a major oncogenic driver, PIK3CA, supported by a complementary CRISPR/Cas9 experiment.CONCLUSIONS: We provide practical guidelines for improved design and analysis of genome-wide loss-of-function profiling and demonstrate how this novel strategy can be applied towards improved mapping of genetic dependencies of cancer cells to aid development of targeted anticancer treatments.

AB - BACKGROUND: Genome-wide loss-of-function profiling is widely used for systematic identification of genetic dependencies in cancer cells; however, the poor reproducibility of RNA interference (RNAi) screens has been a major concern due to frequent off-target effects. Currently, a detailed understanding of the key factors contributing to the sub-optimal consistency is still a lacking, especially on how to improve the reliability of future RNAi screens by controlling for factors that determine their off-target propensity.METHODS: We performed a systematic, quantitative analysis of the consistency between two genome-wide shRNA screens conducted on a compendium of cancer cell lines, and also compared several gene summarization methods for inferring gene essentiality from shRNA level data. We then devised novel concepts of seed essentiality and shRNA family, based on seed region sequences of shRNAs, to study in-depth the contribution of seed-mediated off-target effects to the consistency of the two screens. We further investigated two seed-sequence properties, seed pairing stability, and target abundance in terms of their capability to minimize the off-target effects in post-screening data analysis. Finally, we applied this novel methodology to identify genetic interactions and synthetic lethal partners of cancer drivers, and confirmed differential essentiality phenotypes by detailed CRISPR/Cas9 experiments.RESULTS: Using the novel concepts of seed essentiality and shRNA family, we demonstrate how genome-wide loss-of-function profiling of a common set of cancer cell lines can be actually made fairly reproducible when considering seed-mediated off-target effects. Importantly, by excluding shRNAs having higher propensity for off-target effects, based on their seed-sequence properties, one can remove noise from the genome-wide shRNA datasets. As a translational application case, we demonstrate enhanced reproducibility of genetic interaction partners of common cancer drivers, as well as identify novel synthetic lethal partners of a major oncogenic driver, PIK3CA, supported by a complementary CRISPR/Cas9 experiment.CONCLUSIONS: We provide practical guidelines for improved design and analysis of genome-wide loss-of-function profiling and demonstrate how this novel strategy can be applied towards improved mapping of genetic dependencies of cancer cells to aid development of targeted anticancer treatments.

KW - Class I Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases

KW - Genomics

KW - Guidelines as Topic

KW - Humans

KW - Models, Genetic

KW - Neoplasms/genetics

KW - Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases

KW - RNA Interference

KW - Reproducibility of Results

U2 - 10.1186/s13073-017-0440-2

DO - 10.1186/s13073-017-0440-2

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28569207

VL - 9

SP - 51

JO - Genome Medicine

JF - Genome Medicine

SN - 1756-994X

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 199423415