| Literature DB >> 26354037 |
Xiaolong Wang1, Honghao Yu2,3, Anmin Lei4, Jiankui Zhou5,6, Wenxian Zeng1, Haijing Zhu2,3, Zhiming Dong6, Yiyuan Niu1, Bingbo Shi1, Bei Cai1, Jinwang Liu2,3, Shuai Huang2,3, Hailong Yan1,2,3, Xiaoe Zhao4, Guangxian Zhou1, Xiaoling He1, Xiaoxu Chen1, Yuxin Yang1, Yu Jiang1, Lei Shi2,3, Xiue Tian1, Yongjun Wang1, Baohua Ma4, Xingxu Huang5,6, Lei Qu2,3, Yulin Chen1.
Abstract
Recent advances in the study of the CRISPR/Cas9 system have provided a precise and versatile approach for genome editing in various species. However, the applicability and efficiency of this method in large animal models, such as the goat, have not been extensively studied. Here, by co-injection of one-cell stage embryos with Cas9 mRNA and sgRNAs targeting two functional genes (MSTN and FGF5), we successfully produced gene-modified goats with either one or both genes disrupted. The targeting efficiency of MSTN and FGF5 in cultured primary fibroblasts was as high as 60%, while the efficiency of disrupting MSTN and FGF5 in 98 tested animals was 15% and 21% respectively, and 10% for double gene modifications. The on- and off-target mutations of the target genes in fibroblasts, as well as in somatic tissues and testis of founder and dead animals, were carefully analyzed. The results showed that simultaneous editing of several sites was achieved in large animals, demonstrating that the CRISPR/Cas9 system has the potential to become a robust and efficient gene engineering tool in farm animals, and therefore will be critically important and applicable for breeding.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26354037 PMCID: PMC4564737 DOI: 10.1038/srep13878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Evaluation of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated modifications of MSTN and FGF5 in goat fibroblasts.
(a) Schematic diagram of MSTN and FGF5 partial protein coding region and the targeting loci of sgRNA:Cas9. sgRNAs targeting sites are presented in red. PAM sequences are highlighted in green and underlined. (b) Left panel, PCR products of the targeted exon 2 of MSTN from goat fibroblasts transfected with Cas9 and MSTN sgRNA1. Right panel, detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated on-target cleavage of MSTN by T7E1 cleavage assay. PCR products from left panel were subjected to T7E1 cleavage assay. M, marker; WT, wild type PCR product from fibroblasts that have not treated with CRISPR/Cas9. (c) Left panel, PCR products of the targeted exon 3 of MSTN from goat fibroblasts transfected with Cas9 and MSTN sgRNA2. Right panel, detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated on-target cleavage of MSTN by T7E1 cleavage assay. PCR products from left panel were subjected to T7E1 cleavage assay. (d) Sequences of modified MSTN alleles. Target sequences complementary to MSTN sgRNAs are in red text; the mutations are blue, lower case; insertions (+), deletions (−) or mutation (m) are shown to the right of each allele. (e) PCR products of the targeted exon 1 of FGF5 from goat fibroblasts transfected with Cas9 and FGF5 sgRNA1, FGF5 sgRNA2 and FGF5 sgRNA1 & 2, respectively. (f) Detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated on-target cleavage of FGF5 by T7E1 cleavage assay. PCR products from (e) were subjected to T7E1 cleavage assay. (g)Sequences of modified FGF5 alleles. Target sequences complementary to FGF5 sgRNAs are in red text; the mutations are blue, lower case; insertions (+), deletions (−), mutation (m) or turnover (t) i shown to the right of each allele.
Summary of production of gene-modified goats via CRISPR-Cas9.
| Goats forzygotecollection | Collectedembryos | Cas9-sgRNA injectedembryos (one-cell stage) | Recipientgoats | Newborns | Alive goats | Gene-modified goats | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injectedembryos | Transferredembryos | ||||||
| 79 | 926 | 862 | 416 | 137 | 93 | 79 | 26 |
aFive surrogate ewes had aborted.
Figure 2Detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated modifications of MSTN and FGF5 in lambs and tissues.
(a) Photographs of 30-day-old gene-modified lambs (Photo taken by X.W.). (b) PCR products of the targeted region of MSTN and FGF5 from founder goats co-microinjected with a mixture of Cas9 mRNA and sgRNAs. (c) Detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated on-target cleavage of MSTN and FGF5 by T7E1 cleavage assay. All PCR products from (b) were subjected to T7E1 cleavage assay. All the samples were digested by T7E1, suggesting that all founders carry MSTN and FGF5 mutations. (d) Sequencing results of modified MSTN and FGF5 loci detected in lambs.
The efficacy of Cas9-mediated modifications in goat fibroblasts and tested individuals.
| Target gene | Fibroblasts | Tested individuals |
|---|---|---|
| 15/26 (57.7%) | 15/98 (15.3%) | |
| 11/18 (61.1%) | 21/98 (21.4%) | |
| − | 10/98 (10.2%) |
Figure 3Detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated targeting in different tissues.
(a) Dead goat #D24 was chose for tissue distribution analysis of on –target mutations. PCR products of the targeted regions of MSTN and FGF5 from seven tissues. (b) Detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated on-target cleavage of MSTN and FGF5 by T7E1 cleavage assay. All PCR products from (a) were subjected to T7E1 cleavage assay. All the samples were digested by T7E1, suggesting that all the 7 tested tissues carry MSTN and FGF5 mutations.
Figure 4Detection of the MSTN and FGF5 sgRNA:Cas9-mediated off-target cleavages in vivo.
(a) PCR products of the potential off-target sites of MSTN and FGF5 sgRNA:Cas9 from founder lambs. A total of 13 potential off-target sites most homologous to MSTN and FGF5 sgRNA were named OT1 to OT13. OT5 and OT7 were selected and PCR amplified from genomic DNA from founders. (b) Detection of sgRNA:Cas9-mediated off-target cleavage of MSTN and FGF5 by T7E1 cleavage assay. All PCR products from (a) were subjected to T7E1 cleavage assay. (c) Sequencing results of PCR products.