High-Density Cell Arrays for Genome-Scale Phenotypic Screening

SLAS Discov. 2019 Mar;24(3):274-283. doi: 10.1177/2472555218818757. Epub 2019 Jan 25.

Abstract

Due to high associated costs and considerable time investments of cell-based screening, there is a strong demand for new technologies that enable preclinical development and tests of diverse biologicals in a cost-saving and time-efficient manner. For those reasons we developed the high-density cell array (HD-CA) platform, which miniaturizes cell-based screening in the form of preprinted and ready-to-run screening arrays. With the HD-CA technology, up to 24,576 samples can be tested in a single experiment, thereby saving costs and time for microscopy-based screening by 75%. Experiments on the scale of the entire human genome can be addressed in a real parallel manner, with screening campaigns becoming more comfortable and devoid of robotics infrastructure on the user side. The high degree of miniaturization enables working with expensive reagents and rare and difficult-to-obtain cell lines. We have also optimized an automated imaging procedure for HD-CA and demonstrate the applicability of HD-CA to CRISPR-Cas9- and RNAi-mediated phenotypic assessment of the gene function.

Keywords: CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing; EGF endocytosis; KIF27; cell arrays; phenotypic screening.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • CRISPR-Cas Systems
  • Cell Line
  • Cytological Techniques / methods*
  • Endocytosis
  • Epidermal Growth Factor / metabolism
  • Genome, Human*
  • Humans
  • Miniaturization
  • Phenotype
  • RNA Interference
  • Robotics

Substances

  • Epidermal Growth Factor