CSC software corrects off-target mediated gRNA depletion in CRISPR-Cas9 essentiality screens (original) (raw)

Identification and mitigation of pervasive off-target activity in CRISPR-Cas9 screens for essential non-coding elements: Supplementary Information

Pooled CRISPR-Cas9 screens have recently emerged as a powerful method for functionally characterizing regulatory elements in the non-coding genome, but off-target effects in these experiments have not been systematically evaluated. Here, we conducted a genome-scale screen for essential CTCF loop anchors in the K562 leukemia cell line. Surprisingly, the primary drivers of signal in this screen were single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) with low specificity scores. After removing these guides, we found that there were no CTCF loop anchors critical for cell growth. We also observed this effect in an independent screen fine-mapping the core motifs in enhancers of the GATA1 gene. We then conducted screens in parallel with CRISPRi and CRISPRa, which do not induce DNA damage, and found that an unexpected and distinct set of off-targets also caused strong confounding growth effects with these epigenome-editing platforms. Promisingly, strict filtering of CRISPRi libraries using GuideScan specificity sc...

Evaluation and Design of Genome-Wide CRISPR/SpCas9 Knockout Screens

G3 (Bethesda, Md.), 2017

The adaptation of CRISPR/SpCas9 technology to mammalian cell lines is transforming the study of human functional genomics. Pooled libraries of CRISPR guide RNAs (gRNAs) targeting human protein-coding genes and encoded in viral vectors have been used to systematically create gene knockouts in a variety of human cancer and immortalized cell lines, in an effort to identify whether these knockouts cause cellular fitness defects. Previous work has shown that CRISPR screens are more sensitive and specific than pooled library shRNA screens in similar assays, but currently there exists significant variability across CRISPR library designs and experimental protocols. In this study, we re-analyze 17 genome-scale knockout screens in human cell lines from three research groups using three different genome-scale gRNA libraries. Using the Bayesian Analysis of Gene Essentiality (BAGEL) algorithm to identify essential genes, we refine and expand our previously defined set of human core essential ge...

Mitigation of off-target toxicity in CRISPR-Cas9 screens for essential non-coding elements

Nature Communications

Pooled CRISPR-Cas9 screens are a powerful method for functionally characterizing regulatory elements in the non-coding genome, but off-target effects in these experiments have not been systematically evaluated. Here, we investigate Cas9, dCas9, and CRISPRi/a off-target activity in screens for essential regulatory elements. The sgRNAs with the largest effects in genome-scale screens for essential CTCF loop anchors in K562 cells were not single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) that disrupted gene expression near the on-target CTCF anchor. Rather, these sgRNAs had high off-target activity that, while only weakly correlated with absolute offtarget site number, could be predicted by the recently developed GuideScan specificity score. Screens conducted in parallel with CRISPRi/a, which do not induce double-stranded DNA breaks, revealed that a distinct set of off-targets also cause strong confounding fitness effects with these epigenome-editing tools. Promisingly, filtering of CRISPRi libraries using Guide-Scan specificity scores removed these confounded sgRNAs and enabled identification of essential regulatory elements.

Evaluation and Design of Genome-wide CRISPR/Cas9 Knockout Screens

2017

The adaptation of CRISPR/Cas9 technology to mammalian cell lines is transforming the study of human functional genomics. Pooled libraries of CRISPR guide RNAs (gRNAs), targeting human protein-coding genes and encoded in viral vectors, have been used to systematically create gene knockouts in a variety of human cancer and immortalized cell lines, in an effort to identify whether these knockouts cause cellular fitness defects. Previous work has shown that CRISPR screens are more sensitive and specific than pooled library shRNA screens in similar assays, but currently there exists significant variability across CRISPR library designs and experimental protocols. In this study, we re-analyze 17 genome-scale knockout screens in human cell lines from three research groups using three different genome-scale gRNA libraries, using the Bayesian Analysis of Gene Essentiality (BAGEL) algorithm to identify essential genes, to refine and expand our previously defined set of human core essential ge...

Computational correction of copy-number effect improves specificity of CRISPR-Cas9 essentiality screens in cancer cells

2017

The CRISPR-Cas9 system has revolutionized gene editing both on single genes and in multiplexed loss-of-function screens, enabling precise genome-scale identification of genes essential to proliferation and survival of cancer cells. However, previous studies reported that an anti-proliferative effect of Cas9-mediated DNA cleavage confounds such measurement of genetic dependency, particularly in the setting of copy number gain1-4. We performed genome-scale CRISPR-Cas9 essentiality screens on 342 cancer cell lines and found that this effect is common to all lines, leading to false positive results when targeting genes in copy number amplified regions. We developed CERES, a computational method to estimate gene dependency levels from CRISPR-Cas9 essentiality screens while accounting for the copy-number-specific effect, as well as variable sgRNA activity. We applied CERES to sets of screens performed with different sgRNA libraries and found that it reduces false positive results and prov...

CRISPR screens provide a comprehensive assessment of cancer vulnerabilities but generate false-positive hits for highly amplified genomic regions

Cancer discovery, 2016

CRISPR/Cas9 has emerged as a powerful new tool to systematically probe gene function. In this study, we compare the performance of CRISPR to RNAi-based loss-of-function screens for the identification of cancer dependencies by performing parallel deep-coverage shRNA and CRISPR screens targeting 2722 genes across several cancer cell lines. CRISPR-based dropout screens identified more lethal genes compared to RNAi in all five cancer models, indicating that the identification of many cellular dependencies may require full gene inactivation, as induced by CRISPR but not RNAi. However, in two aneuploid cancer models we found that all genes within highly amplified regions, including non-expressed genes, scored as lethal by CRISPR, revealing an unanticipated class of false-positive hits in CRISPR-based screens. Using a CRISPR tiling array that encompassed all possible sgRNAs against the coding regions of 139 genes, we found that sgRNAs targeting essential domains provide the most robust dro...

Correction of Off-Targeting in CRISPR Screens Uncovers Genetic Dependencies in Melanoma Cells

2019

CRISPR-based high-throughput screens are a powerful method to unbiasedly assign function to a large set of genes, but current genome-wide libraries yield a substantial number of false positives and negatives. We use a retrieval-tree based approach to accurately characterize the off-target space of these libraries and show that they contain a notable fraction of highly promiscuous gRNAs. Promiscuous gRNAs are depleted from screens in a gene-independent manner, create noise in the data generated by these libraries, and ultimately lead to low accuracy in hit identification. This extensive off-targeting also contributes to low overlap between data generated by independent libraries. To minimize these problems we developed the CRISPR Specificity Correction (CSC), a computational approach that segregates on- and off-targeting effects on gRNA depletion. We demonstrate that CSC is able to reduce the occurrence of false positives, improve hit reproducibility between different libraries, and ...

Unsupervised correction of gene-independent cell responses to CRISPR-Cas9 targeting

BMC Genomics, 2018

Background: Genome editing by CRISPR-Cas9 technology allows large-scale screening of gene essentiality in cancer. A confounding factor when interpreting CRISPR-Cas9 screens is the high false-positive rate in detecting essential genes within copy number amplified regions of the genome. We have developed the computational tool CRISPRcleanR which is capable of identifying and correcting gene-independent responses to CRISPR-Cas9 targeting. CRISPRcleanR uses an unsupervised approach based on the segmentation of single-guide RNA fold change values across the genome, without making any assumption about the copy number status of the targeted genes. Results: Applying our method to existing and newly generated genome-wide essentiality profiles from 15 cancer cell lines, we demonstrate that CRISPRcleanR reduces false positives when calling essential genes, correcting biases within and outside of amplified regions, while maintaining true positive rates. Established cancer dependencies and essentiality signals of amplified cancer driver genes are detectable post-correction. CRISPRcleanR reports sgRNA fold changes and normalised read counts, is therefore compatible with downstream analysis tools, and works with multiple sgRNA libraries. Conclusions: CRISPRcleanR is a versatile open-source tool for the analysis of CRISPR-Cas9 knockout screens to identify essential genes.

Identification of oncogenic driver mutations by genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 dropout screening

BMC genomics, 2016

Genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9 dropout screens can identify genes whose knockout affects cell viability. Recent CRISPR screens detected thousands of essential genes required for cellular survival and key cellular processes; however discovering novel lineage-specific genetic dependencies from the many hits still remains a challenge. To assess whether CRISPR-Cas9 dropout screens can help identify cancer dependencies, we screened two human cancer cell lines carrying known and distinct oncogenic mutations using a genome-wide sgRNA library. We found that the gRNA targeting the driver mutation EGFR was one of the highest-ranking candidates in the EGFR-mutant HCC-827 lung adenocarcinoma cell line. Likewise, sgRNAs for NRAS and MAP2K1 (MEK1), a downstream kinase of mutant NRAS, were identified among the top hits in the NRAS-mutant neuroblastoma cell line CHP-212. Depletion of these genes targeted by the sgRNAs strongly correlated with the sensitivity to specific kinase inhibitors of the EGFR or RA...

CCTop: An Intuitive, Flexible and Reliable CRISPR/Cas9 Target Prediction Tool

PLOS ONE, 2015

Engineering of the CRISPR/Cas9 system has opened a plethora of new opportunities for site-directed mutagenesis and targeted genome modification. Fundamental to this is a stretch of twenty nucleotides at the 5' end of a guide RNA that provides specificity to the bound Cas9 endonuclease. Since a sequence of twenty nucleotides can occur multiple times in a given genome and some mismatches seem to be accepted by the CRISPR/Cas9 complex, an efficient and reliable in silico selection and evaluation of the targeting site is key prerequisite for the experimental success. Here we present the CRISPR/Cas9 target online predictor (CCTop, http://crispr.cos.uni-heidelberg.de) to overcome limitations of already available tools. CCTop provides an intuitive user interface with reasonable default parameters that can easily be tuned by the user. From a given query sequence, CCTop identifies and ranks all candidate sgRNA target sites according to their off-target quality and displays full documentation. CCTop was experimentally validated for gene inactivation, non-homologous end-joining as well as homology directed repair. Thus, CCTop provides the bench biologist with a tool for the rapid and efficient identification of high quality target sites.