AI Article Synopsis

  • - Genetically-encoded single-cell barcodes can help with tasks like tracing cell lineages and conducting genetic screens, but current methods have limitations in speed and effectiveness.
  • - This study proposes a new method using combinations of fluorescent proteins to create a high-diversity barcode library that allows for non-destructive, quick, and affordable identification of cells.
  • - The researchers successfully tested this method, creating a library of about 150 unique barcodes using 18 fluorescent proteins, and demonstrated its effectiveness for classifying cells and enabling genetic screenings and lineage tracing.

Article Abstract

Genetically-encoded, single-cell barcodes are broadly useful for experimental tasks such as lineage tracing or genetic screens. For such applications, a barcode library would ideally have high diversity (many unique barcodes), non-destructive identification (repeated measurements in the same cells or population), and fast, inexpensive readout (many cells and conditions). Current nucleic acid barcoding methods generate high diversity but require destructive and slow/expensive readout, and current fluorescence barcoding methods are non-destructive, fast, and inexpensive to readout but lack high diversity. We recently proposed theory for how fluorescent protein combinations may generate a high-diversity barcode library with non-destructive, fast and inexpensive identification. Here, we present an initial experimental proof-of-concept by generating a library of ~150 barcodes from two-way combinations of 18 fluorescent proteins. We use a pooled cloning strategy to generate a barcode library that is validated to contain every possible combination of the 18 fluorescent proteins. Experimental results using single mammalian cells and spectral flow cytometry demonstrate excellent classification performance of individual fluorescent proteins, with the exception of mTFP1, and of most evaluated barcodes, with many true positive rates >99%. The library is compatible with genetic screening for hundreds of genes (or gene pairs) and lineage tracing hundreds of clones. This work lays a foundation for greater diversity libraries (potentially ~10 and more) generated from hundreds of spectrally-resolvable tandem fluorescent protein probes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11526929PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.10.23.619855DOI Listing

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