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  3. Interrogation and Control of Mammalian Transcription
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (BCS)
Thesis Defense

Interrogation and Control of Mammalian Transcription

Speaker(s)
Silvana Konermann - Feng Zhang Lab
Add to CalendarAmerica/New_YorkInterrogation and Control of Mammalian Transcription 11/23/2015 6:00 pm11/23/2015 8:00 pmBroad Institute Auditorium, 415 Main Street, Cambridge MA 02139
November 23, 2015
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Location
Broad Institute Auditorium, 415 Main Street, Cambridge MA 02139
Contact
Julianne Gale
    Description

    Gene expression is dynamic in living systems, enabling environmental adaptation and homeostasis. Transcript levels may change temporarily during distinct phases of biological processes, while longer lasting modifications to their regulatory machinery can lead to specific cell states or disease phenotypes. However, versatile and robust methods to investigate causal relationships between gene expression states and biological phenotypes remain elusive. My thesis work – divided into two main parts – has focused on the development of technologies to enable efficient, generalizable, and precise perturbation of mammalian gene expression. The first part of my research focused on the development of light-inducible transcriptional effectors (LITEs) to mediate positive and negative regulation of endogenous mammalian gene expression (Konermann et al. Nature 2013). Optical stimulation enables precise spatiotemporal control to closely match endogenous transcriptional dynamics. I engineered the LITE system based on the programmable TALE DNA binding proteins from plant pathogens in combination with the light-inducible dimer cryptochrome 2 – cib1 from Arabidopsis thaliana. Light enables fast and reversible recruitment of transcriptional effector domains to the TALE bound to the endogenous target promoter through dimerization of cryptochrome 2 – cib1. I applied LITEs to control gene expression in primary neurons as well as in the mouse brain in vivo, demonstrating their potential to dissect genetic contributions to dynamic behaviors such as learning. Epigenetic regulation of transcriptional state is an additional layer of endogenous control exerted by the cell to store more permanent states such as memories. To interrogate epigenetic in addition to transcriptional dynamics, I next developed TALE-mediated targeting of 32 repressive histone effectors to alter epigenetic states in a locus-specific manner. The LITE system establishes a novel mode of optogenetic control of endogenous cellular processes and enables direct testing of the causal roles of genetic and epigenetic regulation in normal biological processes and disease states. One major limiting aspect of TALE-based transcriptional activators is the costly and labor-intensive construction of their repetitive DNA binding domains. As a result, the utility of TALEs for higher-throughput gene targeting experiments remains limited. The 3 CRISPR nuclease Cas9, however, can be easily programmed using a short guide RNA homologous to the target genomic DNA of interest. Additionally, Cas9 can be easily converted into an RNA-guided DNA binding protein (dCas9) via inactivation of its two catalytic domains. The ease and scalability of the CRISPR-Cas9 system potentially enables systematic, genome-scale perturbation, but the magnitude of transcriptional upregulation achieved by the current generation of Cas9 transcriptional activators typically ranges from low to ineffective. In order to achieve a system where the majority of Cas9 activators are highly functional, I undertook structure-guided engineering to generate a potent, synergistic Cas9 activation complex (SAM) capable of mediating robust upregulation with a single sgRNA (Konermann et al., Nature, 2015) which outperforms current systems by more than two orders of magnitude. I demonstrated that these transcriptional effectors are capable of activating up to 10 genes simultaneously, allowing for understanding of complex genetic and regulatory networks. Genome-scale GOF screening approaches have largely remained limited to the use of cDNA library systems, which are costly and challenging to use in a pooled format. To overcome this limitation, I designed a genome-scale sgRNA library targeting every coding isoform from the RefSeq database (23,430 isoforms) for a final library of 70,290 guides. I next aimed to identify gain-of-function changes that can lead to the development of BRAF inhibitor resistance in BRAFV600 mutant melanoma cells. The screen results highlighted a number of gene candidates that both confirm known BRAF inhibitor-resistance pathways and suggest novel mechanisms of action. SAM activators present a highly reliable and generalizable tool for genome-wide interrogation of gene function and interaction in diverse biological processes. Recently, we have extended the utility of the SAM system to enable bimodal control through the use of modified, truncated deadRNAs (dRNAs) (Dahlman, et al., Nature Biotechnology 2015). These dRNAs prevent nucleolytic activity of an active Cas9 nuclease and transform the wildtype enzyme into an efficient transcriptional activator when combined with the SAM activatorcomponents. This system enables simultaneous knock-out of gene A and activation of gene B in the same cell population, enabling bidirectional interrogation of gene interaction and regulatory networks.

    Speaker Bio

    A graduate student in Prof. Feng Zhang’s lab, is the recipient of the 2012 Hubert Schömaker Fellowship. Konermann is developing a new method for manipulating brain gene expression using light. The brain expresses around 20,000 genes, and a method to regulate their activity with precision would be of great value as a research tool. Konermann’s goal is to use this technology to study the genetic basis of depression.

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