Single-cell Perturb-seq CRISPRi
CRISPRi is a useful perturbation because it behaves like a dimmer switch: the guide RNA brings a catalytically inactive Cas9 repressor to a regulatory region, and transcription drops without making a DNA double-strand break. Perturb-seq adds a pooled single-cell readout, so each cell carries both a perturbation identity and a transcriptome.
The interactive view below is one continuous 3D cell, not a sequence of separate plots. Drag the cell to rotate it, scroll to zoom, or use the focus buttons to move from the whole cell into the chromatin zone, the open sgRNA target sequence, and the transcript readout.
One perturbed cell remains in view: membrane, nucleus, organelles, sgRNA cargo, mRNA molecules, and capture barcode are all part of the same scene.
What the experiment measures
The key output is not only whether a target gene went down. The useful object is a table where every row is a single cell, every cell has a guide assignment, and every column is a measured gene. That lets us ask whether perturbing one regulator shifts cells toward another state, suppresses a pathway, changes response to stimulation, or creates a subtle expression program that would be invisible in a bulk assay.
Why CRISPRi fits this readout
CRISPRi is especially useful when complete knockout is too harsh or when multiple perturbations would create too many DNA breaks. Because it represses transcription through dCas9-KRAB rather than cutting DNA, it can be paired with pooled single-cell screens where the phenotype is a transcriptome, not just growth.
Minimal protocol logic
- Build or obtain a cell line expressing CRISPRi machinery.
- Introduce a pooled sgRNA library at controlled multiplicity.
- Select and culture cells long enough for repression.
- Capture single cells and prepare transcriptome plus guide libraries.
- Sequence, assign guides to cells, and quantify expression.
- Compare each perturbation against controls and visualize response programs.
Enjoy Reading This Article?
Here are some more articles you might like to read next: