A village in a dish model system for population-scale hiPSC studies

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Abstract

The mechanisms by which DNA alleles contribute to disease risk, drug response, and other human phenotypes are highly context-specific, varying across cell types and different conditions. Human induced pluripotent stem cells are uniquely suited to study these context-dependent effects but cell lines from hundreds or thousands of individuals are required. Village cultures, where multiple induced pluripotent stem lines are cultured and differentiated in a single dish, provide an elegant solution for scaling induced pluripotent stem experiments to the necessary sample sizes required for population-scale studies. Here, we show the utility of village models, demonstrating how cells can be assigned to an induced pluripotent stem line using single-cell sequencing and illustrating that the genetic, epigenetic or induced pluripotent stem line-specific effects explain a large percentage of gene expression variation for many genes. We demonstrate that village methods can effectively detect induced pluripotent stem line-specific effects, including sensitive dynamics of cell states.

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Neavin, D. R., Steinmann, A. M., Farbehi, N., Chiu, H. S., Daniszewski, M. S., Arora, H., … Powell, J. E. (2023). A village in a dish model system for population-scale hiPSC studies. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38704-1

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