8 research outputs found

    Systematic genetics and single‐cell imaging reveal widespread morphological pleiotropy and cell‐to‐cell variability

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    Abstract Our ability to understand the genotype‐to‐phenotype relationship is hindered by the lack of detailed understanding of phenotypes at a single‐cell level. To systematically assess cell‐to‐cell phenotypic variability, we combined automated yeast genetics, high‐content screening and neural network‐based image analysis of single cells, focussing on genes that influence the architecture of four subcellular compartments of the endocytic pathway as a model system. Our unbiased assessment of the morphology of these compartments—endocytic patch, actin patch, late endosome and vacuole—identified 17 distinct mutant phenotypes associated with ~1,600 genes (~30% of all yeast genes). Approximately half of these mutants exhibited multiple phenotypes, highlighting the extent of morphological pleiotropy. Quantitative analysis also revealed that incomplete penetrance was prevalent, with the majority of mutants exhibiting substantial variability in phenotype at the single‐cell level. Our single‐cell analysis enabled exploration of factors that contribute to incomplete penetrance and cellular heterogeneity, including replicative age, organelle inheritance and response to stress

    Systematic analysis of bypass suppression of essential genes

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    Abstract Essential genes tend to be highly conserved across eukaryotes, but, in some cases, their critical roles can be bypassed through genetic rewiring. From a systematic analysis of 728 different essential yeast genes, we discovered that 124 (17%) were dispensable essential genes. Through whole‐genome sequencing and detailed genetic analysis, we investigated the genetic interactions and genome alterations underlying bypass suppression. Dispensable essential genes often had paralogs, were enriched for genes encoding membrane‐associated proteins, and were depleted for members of protein complexes. Functionally related genes frequently drove the bypass suppression interactions. These gene properties were predictive of essential gene dispensability and of specific suppressors among hundreds of genes on aneuploid chromosomes. Our findings identify yeast's core essential gene set and reveal that the properties of dispensable essential genes are conserved from yeast to human cells, correlating with human genes that display cell line‐specific essentiality in the Cancer Dependency Map (DepMap) project

    Data from: Systematic analysis of complex genetic interactions

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    To systematically explore complex genetic interactions, we constructed ~200,000 yeast triple mutants and scored negative trigenic interactions. We selected double-mutant query genes across a broad spectrum of biological processes, spanning a range of quantitative features of the global digenic interaction network and tested for a genetic interaction with a third mutation. Trigenic interactions often occurred among functionally related genes, and essential genes were hubs on the trigenic network. Despite their functional enrichment, trigenic interactions tended to link genes in distant bioprocesses and displayed a weaker magnitude than digenic interactions. We estimate that the global trigenic interaction network is ~100 times as large as the global digenic network, highlighting the potential for complex genetic interactions to affect the biology of inheritance, including the genotype-to-phenotype relationship

    AdditionalDataS6

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    This file contains the trigenic interactions list of MDY2-MTC1 and digenic interaction list of MDY2 and MTC1 corresponding to Fig. 3. The ‘Tetrad Analysis’ tab contains confirmations results obtained from tetrad analysis: SS is synthetic sick, SL is synthetic lethal. The ‘Genetic interactions’ tab contains columns that are annotated with ‘CellMap’ since they contain genetic interactions from (7) downloaded from theCellMap.org (26) as well as scores derived in this study
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