4.7 Article

Sparse dictionary learning recovers pleiotropy from human cell fitness screens

Journal

CELL SYSTEMS
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages 286-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cels.2021.12.005

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NCI [F32CA243290]
  2. NSF [IIS2030459, IIS2033384]
  3. Harvard Data Science Initiative
  4. Amazon
  5. Bayer Early Excellence in Science Award
  6. National Cancer Institute's Office of Cancer Genomics Cancer Target Discovery and Development (CTD<^>2) initiative
  7. [U01 CA176058]

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In high-throughput functional genomic screens, single gene perturbations can induce multiple cascading functional outcomes, known as pleiotropy. Our approach successfully recovered pleiotropic functions, untangled signaling pathways, and predicted unknown protein complex subunit stoichiometry using fitness screen data alone.
In high-throughput functional genomic screens, each gene product is commonly assumed to exhibit a singular biological function within a defined protein complex or pathway. In practice, a single gene perturbation may induce multiple cascading functional outcomes, a genetic principle known as pleiotropy. Here, we model pleiotropy in fitness screen collections by representing each gene perturbation as the sum of multiple perturbations of biological functions, each harboring independent fitness effects inferred empirically from the data. Our approach (Webster) recovered pleiotropic functions for DNA damage proteins from genotoxic fitness screens, untangled distinct signaling pathways upstream of shared effector proteins from cancer cell fitness screens, and predicted the stoichiometry of an unknown protein complex subunit from fitness data alone. Modeling compound sensitivity profiles in terms of genetic functions recovered compound mechanisms of action. Our approach establishes a sparse approximation mechanism for unraveling complex genetic architectures underlying high-dimensional gene perturbation readouts.

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