Methods and applications of in vivo CRISPR screening.

Journal: Nature reviews. Genetics
Published Date:

Abstract

A fundamental goal in genetics is to understand the connection between genotype and phenotype in health and disease. Genetic screens in which dozens to thousands of genetic elements are perturbed in a pooled fashion offer the opportunity to generate large-scale, information-rich and unbiased genotype-phenotype maps. Although typically applied in reductionist in vitro settings, methods enabling pooled CRISPR-Cas perturbation screening in vivo are gaining attention as they have the potential to accelerate the discovery and annotation of gene function across cells, tissues, developmental stages, disease states and species. In this Review, we discuss essential criteria for understanding, designing and implementing in vivo screening experiments, with a focus on pooled CRISPR-based screens in mice. We also highlight how the resulting datasets, combined with advances in multi-omics and artificial intelligence, will accelerate progress and enable fundamental discoveries across basic and translational sciences.

Authors

  • Antonio J Santinha
    Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zurich, Basel, Switzerland.
  • Alessio Strano
    Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zurich, Basel, Switzerland.
  • Randall J Platt
    Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zurich, Basel, Switzerland. rplatt@ethz.ch.

Keywords

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