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Functional unknomics: Systematic screening of conserved genes of unknown function.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Change log

Authors

Rocha, João J 
Jayaram, Satish Arcot 
Stevens, Tim J 
Muschalik, Nadine 
Shah, Rajen D 

Abstract

The human genome encodes approximately 20,000 proteins, many still uncharacterised. It has become clear that scientific research tends to focus on well-studied proteins, leading to a concern that poorly understood genes are unjustifiably neglected. To address this, we have developed a publicly available and customisable "Unknome database" that ranks proteins based on how little is known about them. We applied RNA interference (RNAi) in Drosophila to 260 unknown genes that are conserved between flies and humans. Knockdown of some genes resulted in loss of viability, and functional screening of the rest revealed hits for fertility, development, locomotion, protein quality control, and resilience to stress. CRISPR/Cas9 gene disruption validated a component of Notch signalling and 2 genes contributing to male fertility. Our work illustrates the importance of poorly understood genes, provides a resource to accelerate future research, and highlights a need to support database curation to ensure that misannotation does not erode our awareness of our own ignorance.

Description

Acknowledgements: We thank Damian Crowther for loan of the iFly tracking system, Sara Imarisio for advice on proteostasis assays, Tobias Klöpper for help with gene selection for screens, the LMB workshops for help with the system for lifespan measurements, Anna Parish for fly stock maintenance, and Manu Hegde for comments on the manuscript.

Keywords

Animals, Male, Humans, Drosophila, RNA Interference, Fertility

Journal Title

PLoS Biol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1544-9173
1545-7885

Volume Title

21

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Sponsorship
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/R013381/1)
MRC (MC_UU_00006/2)