Mapping the DNA damage response in human cells with high-resolution functional genomics
Project Number5R35GM138167-05
Contact PI/Project LeaderADAMSON, BRITTANY S.
Awardee OrganizationPRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Project Summary
DNA is the blueprint for life. It encodes the instructions for building and maintaining all organisms, from
prokaryotes to humans. Despite this, DNA is frequently damaged. In fact, estimates suggest that each human
cell may experience as many as ~105 lesions per day. To protect their genomes, organisms have therefore
evolved a sophisticated set of mechanisms that sense, signal, and repair chemically diverse forms of DNA
damage and, when damage cannot be repaired, induce programs of cell death. Decades of work have provided
an extensive ‘parts list’ of these mechanisms in human cells. However, a major challenge to our understanding
remains: We do not know how these mechanisms work together at the systems level to ensure response
flexibility across conditions or enable compensation when one mechanism fails. This lack of systematic
knowledge is problematic. It limits our comprehension of human diseases, such as cancers with DNA repair
deficiencies, and it challenges our ability to develop and improve medical therapies that exploit response
activities. We have recently developed functional genomics approaches that enable systematic interrogation of
gene function in human cells, and with these tools, we propose to address this gap in knowledge. The
fundamental logic behind our approaches is simple. We pair CRISPR-based genetic perturbation techniques
with scalable methods for obtaining high-content phenotypes, such as single-cell RNA-sequencing. This allows
us to collect data rich readouts of cell behavior across cells in which we have perturbed the function of many
genes. With such data, we can infer functional relationships between genes and delineate genetic pathways.
Here, I propose to use two of these technologies to map DNA damage response mechanisms in human cells,
with the goals of improving genome editing technologies (Project 1) and achieving deeper understanding of drug
responses during cancer therapy (Project 2). To enable the first project, we demonstrate a new approach that
pairs CRISPR-based genetic screens with deep sequencing of DNA repair junctions to generate high-content
readouts of DNA repair. We establish this approach using Cas9 from Streptococcus pyogenes and propose work
that will serve as a roadmap for understanding genome editing technologies in the future.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
Mechanisms that maintain genome stability have important relevance to human health and disease. We
investigate these mechanisms systematically and at the molecular level to better understand genome editing
technologies and cancer.
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