| Literature DB >> 29218308 |
Leah J Campbell1, David R Hyde1.
Abstract
While retinal degeneration and disease results in permanent damage and vision loss in humans, the severely damaged zebrafish retina has a high capacity to regenerate lost neurons and restore visual behaviors. Advancements in understanding the molecular and cellular basis of this regeneration response give hope that strategies and therapeutics may be developed to restore sight to blind and visually-impaired individuals. Our current understanding has been facilitated by the amenability of zebrafish to molecular tools, imaging techniques, and forward and reverse genetic approaches. Accordingly, the zebrafish research community has developed a diverse array of research tools for use in developing and adult animals, including toolkits for facilitating the generation of transgenic animals, systems for inducible, cell-specific transgene expression, and the creation of knockout alleles for nearly every protein coding gene. As CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing has begun to revolutionize molecular biology research, the zebrafish community has responded in stride by developing CRISPR/Cas9 techniques for the zebrafish as well as incorporating CRISPR/Cas9 into available toolsets. The application of CRISPR/Cas9 to retinal regeneration research will undoubtedly bring us closer to understanding the mechanisms underlying retinal repair and vision restoration in the zebrafish, as well as developing therapeutic approaches that will restore vision to blind and visually-impaired individuals. This review focuses on how CRISPR/Cas9 has been integrated into zebrafish research toolsets and how this new tool will revolutionize the field of retinal regeneration research.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; Müller glia; neuronal progenitor cell; regeneration; retina; zebrafish
Year: 2017 PMID: 29218308 PMCID: PMC5703712 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2017.00099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Resources for zebrafish CRISPR/Cas9 experimental design.
| A Streamlined CRISPR Pipeline to Reliably Generate Zebrafish Frameshifting Alleles | Protocol | Talbot and Amacher, |
| CRISPR/Cas9-mediated conversion of eGFP- into Gal4-transgenic lines in zebrafish | Protocol | Auer et al., |
| CRISPRscan ( | sgRNA design tool | Moreno-Mateos et al., |
| CRISPRz ( | Zebrafish sgRNA database | Varshney et al., |
| Codon-optimized Cas9 (Addgene: 64237) | Plasmid | Yin et al., |
| Vector system for tissue-specific gene disruption (Addgene: 63154, 63155, 63156, 63157) | Plasmids | Ablain et al., |
| 2C-Cas9 tool (Addgene: 74009, 74010) | Plasmids | Di Donato et al., |
| Tg( | Transgenic lines | Yin et al., |
| Tg( | ||
| Tg( | ||
| Tg( |
Figure 1Transgenic reporter lines used in zebrafish retinal regeneration research. (A) The vertebrate retina is a laminated structure with different neurons located in the distinct layers. RPE, retinal pigmented epithelium; OS, outer segments; OLM, outer limiting membrane; ONL, outer nuclear layer; OPL, outer plexiform layer; INL, inner nuclear layer; IPL, inner plexiform layer; GCL, ganglion cell layer; NF, nerve fibers; ILM, inner limiting membrane. (B) List of transgenic reporter zebrafish lines for retinal regeneration research. Fadool (2003), Masai et al. (2003), Shin et al. (2003), Takechi et al. (2003, 2008), Bernardos and Raymond (2006), Fausett and Goldman (2006), Bernardos et al. (2007), Kassen et al. (2007), Tsujimura et al. (2007, 2010), Obholzer et al. (2008), Montgomery et al. (2010), Wan et al. (2012), Randlett et al. (2013).