Will Allen
weallen1.bsky.social
Will Allen
@weallen1.bsky.social
Biology of homeostasis & resilience. New tools to map + control cells. Asst prof at Stanford Dev Bio. HarvardJunior Fellow, neuro Ph.D. Stanford, MPhil MRC LMB
My lab at @devbiostanford.bsky.social (www.allenlabstanford.org) is looking for motivated postdocs and graduate students who are excited about developing new technology and applying in vivo genetic screens to reverse-engineer tissue function. Contact me at wallen@stanford.edu if you are interested!
Allen Lab
www.allenlabstanford.org
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
This was an amazing team effort over multiple years, bringing together diverse expertise from Harvard and @whiteheadinstitute.bsky.social @mitofficial.bsky.social @hhmi.bsky.social . We look forward to expanding to the genome-wide scale and extending to other organs!
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Along with recent spatial developments – e.g. Perturb-FISH, Perturb-View and CRISPR-Map – and fantastic in vivo work from Xin Jin and Randall Platt, this is an extremely exciting time for pooled screening, particularly with large-scale AI efforts (Virtual Cells) on the horizon.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
his work builds on foundational Perturb-Seq dating back to 2016 from the Weissman @jswlab.bsky.social and Regev Labs, and pioneering work on imaging-based pooled genetic screening using MERFISH dating back to 2017 from the Zhuang and Elf labs, and using ISS from 2019 from the Blainey Lab.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
By integrating sequencing and imaging, we can achieve insights that would be difficult from each modality alone, such as convergent effects of mechanistically distinct pathways that all produce cellular steatosis.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
A core aspect of liver organization and function is hepatocyte zonation. Our data revealed both expected regulators of Zonation (Wnt signaling, O2 sensing) as well as potentially novel pathways, in a cell autonomous manner. This work reveals the highly dynamic nature of zonation state.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Because these genetic perturbations are introduced into a living mouse, we can look at the interactions between gene function and physiological state. We can identify functional re-wiring following overnight fasting, which leads to dramatic metabolic state-dependent responses to some perturbations
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
We can then zoom in to identify the specific functional effects of perturbing different genes in an automated and unsupervised way. Combining subcellular imaging with deep learning-based embeddings identified Npc1 as a regulator of lysosome structure (measured through Cathepsin B staining)
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
This rich, multimodal data enables multiple analyses of how genetic perturbations affect multiple aspects of tissue structure and function from the same animal. At a high level, global multimodal analysis of different perturbations allows us to group them into shared pathways.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
In mosaic perturbed mouse livers, we detected small clumps of cells with the same perturbation and measured potent transcriptional phenotypes.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
We apply this approach in the mouse liver, using mosaic CRISPR KO via neonatal lenti delivery (developed by Kristin Knouse) followed by AAV-mediated induction of Cas9 activity in the adult animal to test how perturbation of hundreds of genes impact diverse aspects of hepatocyte structure + function
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Applying this approach in wild type livers revealed rich complexity of single-cell morphologies that can be related to heterogeneity in transcriptional state in the same cells. We believe this will be broadly useful for mapping tissue structure even in un-perturbed tissue.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Multiplexed protein and RNA imaging produces incredibly rich datasets of diverse aspects of subcellular morphology. XingJie Pan developed a deep learning approach, building on Loic Royer's CytoSelf, that allows us to quantitatively analyze millions of pictures of cells.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Through extensive optimization we improved the efficiency of RCA-MERFISH in heavily fixed tissue by orders of magnitude, and made it compatible with multiplexed immunostaining – allowing spatially-resolved protein+RNA readout in the same cells w/ fully automated fluidics and imaging.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
To enable RCA-MERFISH, we developed new methods for large-scale probe synthesis from femtomolar Twist pools of oligos. This solves a major problem of using long (>100 mer) probes and enables genome-scale CRISPR library readout.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Combining RCA-MERFISH for imaging cellular RNAs and perturbation barcodes with multiplexed immunofluorescence for imaging proteins and cell morphology, our approach enables robust in vivo imaging-based pooled genetic screening of complex tissues.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Building on MERFISH developed by Xiaowei Zhuang’s lab and RCA and related methods developed by Mats Nilsson, Karl Deisseroth, and Xiao Wang, we develop RCA-MERFISH to amplify and readout endogenous gene expression and short RNA barcodes in tissue sections.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Leveraging @10xgenomics.bsky.social Flex technology, we develop fixed-cell Perturb-Seq with direct hybridization to sgRNAs. The ability to use fixed cells makes large-scale in vivo Perturb-seq drastically easier and cheaper, while accurately measuring cellular gene expression.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
This preprint is the result of years of work developing and optimizing powerful new tools for large-scale in vivo pooled genetic screens in heavily fixed tissue, with sequencing- and imaging-based readouts of genome-wide gene expression and multiplexed subcellular morphology.
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM
Organ function requires coordinated activities of 1000s of genes in spatially organized cell types under conditions not replicable in vitro. Understanding the molecular basis of emergent tissue function requires new approaches to dissecting diverse cellular+tissue phenotypes in live animals
November 21, 2024 at 6:24 PM