- Nemesh, James;
- Ghosh, Sulagna;
- Mitchell, Jana;
- Salick, Max;
- Mello, Curtis;
- Meyer, Daniel;
- Pietilainen, Olli;
- Piccioni, Federica;
- Guss, Ellen;
- Raghunathan, Kavya;
- Tegtmeyer, Matthew;
- Hawes, Derek;
- Neumann, Anna;
- Worringer, Kathleen;
- Ho, Daniel;
- Kommineni, Sravya;
- Chan, Karrie;
- Peterson, Brant;
- Raymond, Joseph;
- Gold, John;
- Siekmann, Marco;
- Zuccaro, Emanuela;
- Nehme, Ralda;
- Kaykas, Ajamete;
- Eggan, Kevin;
- McCarroll, Steven;
- Wells, Michael
Human genome variation contributes to diversity in neurodevelopmental outcomes and vulnerabilities; recognizing the underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms will require scalable approaches. Here, we describe a cell village experimental platform we used to analyze genetic, molecular, and phenotypic heterogeneity across neural progenitor cells from 44 human donors cultured in a shared in vitro environment using algorithms (Dropulation and Census-seq) to assign cells and phenotypes to individual donors. Through rapid induction of human stem cell-derived neural progenitor cells, measurements of natural genetic variation, and CRISPR-Cas9 genetic perturbations, we identified a common variant that regulates antiviral IFITM3 expression and explains most inter-individual variation in susceptibility to the Zika virus. We also detected expression QTLs corresponding to GWAS loci for brain traits and discovered novel disease-relevant regulators of progenitor proliferation and differentiation such as CACHD1. This approach provides scalable ways to elucidate the effects of genes and genetic variation on cellular phenotypes.