- Bassik, Michael C;
- Kampmann, Martin;
- Lebbink, Robert Jan;
- Wang, Shuyi;
- Hein, Marco Y;
- Poser, Ina;
- Weibezahn, Jimena;
- Horlbeck, Max A;
- Chen, Siyuan;
- Mann, Matthias;
- Hyman, Anthony A;
- LeProust, Emily M;
- McManus, Michael T;
- Weissman, Jonathan S
Genetic interaction (GI) maps, comprising pairwise measures of how strongly the function of one gene depends on the presence of a second, have enabled the systematic exploration of gene function in microorganisms. Here, we present a two-stage strategy to construct high-density GI maps in mammalian cells. First, we use ultracomplex pooled shRNA libraries (25 shRNAs/gene) to identify high-confidence hit genes for a given phenotype and effective shRNAs. We then construct double-shRNA libraries from these to systematically measure GIs between hits. A GI map focused on ricin susceptibility broadly recapitulates known pathways and provides many unexpected insights. These include a noncanonical role for COPI, a previously uncharacterized protein complex affecting toxin clearance, a specialized role for the ribosomal protein RPS25, and functionally distinct mammalian TRAPP complexes. The ability to rapidly generate mammalian GI maps provides a potentially transformative tool for defining gene function and designing combination therapies based on synergistic pairs.