| Literature DB >> 31430902 |
Ali Razzaq1, Fozia Saleem1, Mehak Kanwal2, Ghulam Mustafa1, Sumaira Yousaf2, Hafiz Muhammad Imran Arshad2, Muhammad Khalid Hameed3, Muhammad Sarwar Khan1, Faiz Ahmad Joyia4.
Abstract
Increasing agricultural productivity via modern breeding strategies is of prime interest to attain global food security. An array of biotic and abiotic stressors affect productivity as well as the quality of crop plants, and it is a primary need to develop crops with improved adaptability, high productivity, and resilience against these biotic/abiotic stressors. Conventional approaches to genetic engineering involve tedious procedures. State-of-the-art OMICS approaches reinforced with next-generation sequencing and the latest developments in genome editing tools have paved the way for targeted mutagenesis, opening new horizons for precise genome engineering. Various genome editing tools such as transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs), and meganucleases (MNs) have enabled plant scientists to manipulate desired genes in crop plants. However, these approaches are expensive and laborious involving complex procedures for successful editing. Conversely, CRISPR/Cas9 is an entrancing, easy-to-design, cost-effective, and versatile tool for precise and efficient plant genome editing. In recent years, the CRISPR/Cas9 system has emerged as a powerful tool for targeted mutagenesis, including single base substitution, multiplex gene editing, gene knockouts, and regulation of gene transcription in plants. Thus, CRISPR/Cas9-based genome editing has demonstrated great potential for crop improvement but regulation of genome-edited crops is still in its infancy. Here, we extensively reviewed the availability of CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing tools for plant biotechnologists to target desired genes and its vast applications in crop breeding research.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; TALEN; ZFN; abiotic stress; biotic stress; crop improvement; genome editing; multiplex genome editing; plant breeding
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31430902 PMCID: PMC6720679 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20164045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Structural illustration of first-generation genome editing tools: (A) meganucleases (MNs) have multifunctional domains with the ability to bind double-stranded target DNA and generate DSBs. The meganuclease is demonstrated to bind a target spacer sequence of 14–40 bp (yellow). The FokI nuclease cuts the target sequence (color). (B) Representation of ZFN bound to the target sequence of 18–36 bp long. Each monomer of ZFN (blue) is made by ZFP. There are two basic domains: the DNA binding domain at N-terminus and the catalytic domain with FokI nuclease (white) present at the C-terminus. The connection among these domains is indicated with a pink line. The ZFN modules are merged with Fok1 (white) and dimerized to cut the target sequence at a spacer 5–7 bp (pink) to produce DSBs. (C) Two TALEN dimers bound to the target sequence (pink) site. Each module of TALENs are composed of TALE that contain 33–35 amino acid repeats. The pair of TALENs are separated by a spacer region of 12–21 bp (pink). There are specific RVD modules (green NN, grey NH, red HD, dark blue NI, orange NG, and yellow N) that can recognize only one single nucleotide. TALE modules are dimerized to fuse with FokI (at C-terminus) to produce DSBs in the spacer region.
Figure 2Diagrammatical representation of various genome editing tools and their applications in plants.
Figure 3A general description of the GE mechanism in plants. Plant GE typically consists of the following steps: designing and construction of vectors, targeted delivery of vectors via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation or biolistic for transformation, callus induction and regeneration, mutation screening and analysis, and phenotypic characterization for the desired trait.
Applications of first-generation genome editing tools in crop plants.
| Gene Editor Nucleases | Species | Modification Type | Delivery Technique | Repair Pathway | Target Gene | Desired Trait | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meganuclease |
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Male-sterile plants | [ | |
|
| Trait stacking | Particle bombardment | HR |
| Herbicide tolerance | [ | |
|
| Gene knockout | HR |
| Heritable targeted mutagenesis | [ | ||
| Zinc-finger nucleases |
| Trait stacking | HR |
| Detection of safe harbor loci | [ | |
|
| Trait stacking | Microparticle bombardment | HR |
| Herbicide tolerance | [ | |
|
| Gene expression | Transcriptional activation |
| Improved seed oil composition | [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout |
| HR |
| Heritable transmission | [ | |
|
| Gene replacement | Whiskers | NHEJ |
| Herbicide tolerance | [ | |
| TALENs |
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Improved saccharification efficiency | [ | |
|
| Frame-shift mutation | NHEJ |
| Induction of haploid plants | [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout |
| NHEJ |
| Albino and dwarf phenotype | [ | |
|
| Gene stacking |
| NHEJ |
| High oleic, low linoleic contents | [ | |
|
| Gene knockout | Particle bombardment | NHEJ |
| Minimizing reducing sugars | [ | |
|
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Improved cell wall composition | [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout | Particle bombardment | NHEJ |
| Transient expression in protoplasts | [ | |
|
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Reduced epicuticular wax in leaves | [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Fragrant rice | [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Powdery mildew resistance | [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout | NHEJ | Transgene |
| [ | ||
|
| Gene knockout |
| NHEJ |
| Improved oil quality | [ | |
|
| Gene knockout | Peg-mediated protoplast transformation | NHEJ |
| Targeted mutation | [ | |
|
| Gene knockout | NHEJ |
| Bacterial blight resistance | [ |
Description: Non-homologous end joining (NHEJ), Homology repair (HR), Male sterile 26 (MS26), 3-phosphoshikimate 1-carboxyvinyltransferase 2 (EPSPS), Liguleless 1 (LG1), Trait landing pads (ZmTLP), 3-oxoacyl-[acyl-carrier-protein] synthase II, chloroplastic (KasII), Protein DCL homolog, chloroplastic (DCL), Inositol pentakisphosphate 2-kinase (IPK1), Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT), MATRILINEAL (MTL), Phytoene desaturase (PDS), Fatty acid desaturase (FAD), Vacuolar invertase gene (VInv), Acetolactate synthase gene (ALS), Maize glossy2 (GL2), Betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase (BADH2), MILDEW-RESISTANCE LOCU (MLO), Green fluorescent protein (GFP), Acetolactate synthase genes (Sur A, Sur B), Rice bacterial blight susceptibility gene (Os11N3).
Figure 4Historical chart illuminating key developments in the CRISPR/Cas9 system.
Figure 5Illustration of CRISPR/Cas9-mediated GE. The CRISPR/Cas9 system is composed of sgRNA and Cas9. (A) sgRNA with a guide sequence (colored pink) is developed by the combination of protospacer with crRNA and tracrRNA. (B) Cas9 machinery combines with sgRNA to form a complex to trigger CRISPR/Cas9 editing. The Cas9 nuclease consists of two parts, depending on its function and structure. The recognition site identifies the target DNA and interacts with sgRNA. The nuclease site contains two domains RuvC-like and HNH which cleave the target DNA site non-complementary by the RuvC domain and complementary by the HNH domain to the gRNA. (C) The Cas9 nuclease detects the genomic target site (indicated with blue color) having a 20 bp target sequence that is homologous to seed or guide sequence (indicated with pink color), which is crucial for Cas9 activity and specificity. The specific PAM sequence (indicated with red color) is detected by Cas9: sgRNA complex and DSBs created by the Cas9 endonuclease three base pairs upstream of the PAM sequence. (D) Targeted mutagenesis of a desired gene is achieved by filling the DSB (indicated with black color) by means of the HDR or NHEJ mechanism. The NHEJ repair mechanism generally produces insertion (indicated with yellow color), deletion (indicated with brown color) or indels (indicated with black line) at the break point, generating targeted mutants. The HDR repair mechanism uses a template DNA sequence for homologous recombination to produce gene replacement or gene insertion (indicated with green color).
Figure 6Basic steps in the workflow of CRISPR/Cas9-based genome editing.
List of various single guide RNA (sgRNA) designing bioinformatics tools for the CRISPR/Cas9 system.
| Tool Name | Description & Function | Year | Web Link | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRISPRlnc | Design sgRNA for lncRNAs, works for all species | 2019 | ( | [ |
| CRISPR-Local | Design sgRNA for non-reference cultivars, predict sgRNA that can target multiple genes | 2018 | ( | [ |
| sgRNA Scorer 2.0 | Design sgRNA for several PAM sites | 2017 | ( | [ |
| CRISPR-P 2.0 | Predict on-target scores, analyze and detect guide sequence | 2017 | ( | [ |
| CRISPRpred | Efficient designing of sgRNA based on target in silico prediction | 2017 | ( | [ |
| CRISPR-DO | Specific for both coding and non-coding targets, provides information regarding off-targeted sites and its functional conservation | 2016 | ( | [ |
| phytoCRISP-Ex | UNIX-based standalone, Cas9 target prediction | 2016 | ( | [ |
| CRISPy | Target prediction for sgRNA, graphical representation of results | 2016 | ( | [ |
| Cas-Designer | RNA-guided endonucleases, provides all information about off-targets and out-of frame scores | 2015 | ( | [ |
| CCTop | Predict target sgRNA sequence based on possible off-targets | 2015 | ( | [ |
| Azimuth | Design sgRNA for both on-target and off-target models | 2015 | ( | [ |
| CRISPRdirect | Design sgRNA with minimal off-targets | 2014 | ( | [ |
| CRISPR-PLANT | Construct specific sgRNAs for particular plant species | 2014 | ( | [ |
| CRISPRseek | Screen sgRNA for targeted sequences, produce cleavage scores for predicted off-targets | 2014 | ( | [ |
| Cas-OFFinder | Based on RNA-guided endonucleases, robust for detecting off-target sites | 2014 | ( | [ |
| E-CRISP | Potential target site evaluation | 2014 | ( | [ |
| SSFinder | High-throughput detection of target sites | 2014 | ( | [ |
| GPP Web Portal | Produce potential sgRNA scores | 2014 | ( | [ |
| CRISPR-P | Generate synthetic sgRNA, predict potential sites for enzyme cut | 2014 | ( | [ |
| CHOPCHOP | Detect optimal target sites for sgRNA, produce potential scores for target sites | 2014 | ( | [ |
| sgRNAcas9 | Rapid design of sgRNA with less off-targets | 2014 | ( | [ |
| CRISPR Design | Precise sgRNA construction for target sites, assess off-target sites | 2013 | ( | [ |
Summary of disease-resistant crops developed via CRISPR/Cas9.
| Crop | Target Gene | Pathogen | Gene Function | Trait Improvement | Editing Result | Repair Pathway | Delivery Technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
| Translation initiation factor | Resistance against | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
|
| Transcription factor | Increased resistance against | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
|
| Negative regulator of disease resistance | Resistance to Cotton verticillium wilt | Knock-in | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
|
| co-receptor of coronatine | Bacterial speck resistant | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | |
|
| CP and Rep sequences |
| Negative regulator of viral resistance | Improved resistance against | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
|
| Encoding powdery mildew resistance | Improved resistant against powdery mildew | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
|
| Encoding powdery mildew resistance | Improved resistant against powdery mildew | Knock-out | NHEJ | Particle bombardment | [ |
|
|
| Increase susceptibility against citrus canker | Citrus canker resistant | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | ||
|
| CsLOB1 | Increase susceptibility against citrus canker | Citrus canker resistant | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | ||
|
|
|
| Resistance against blast fungus | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | ||
|
|
| Multiple viruses | Translation initiation factor | Broad virus resistance | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Sucrose transporter gene | Resistance against bacterial blight | Knock-out | NHEJ | [ |
Description: Translation initiation factor 4 gamma gene (eIF4G), WRKY transcription factor 52 (WRKY52), 14-3-3 protein 6-like (Gh14-3-3d), Jasmonate ZIM-domain protein 2 (JAZ2), Powdery mildew resistance protein (Mlo1), Enhanced disease resistance1 (EDR1), LATERAL ORGAN BOUNDARIES 1 (CsLOB1), Ethylene-responsive gene (OsERF922), Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E-1 (elF4E), Bidirectional sugar transporter SWEET13-like (SWEET13).
Summary of CRISPR/Cas9 applications in major crops for abiotic stress tolerance.
| Crop | Target Gene | Trait Study | Editing Result | Repair Mechanism | Delivery Technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Salinity tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Salinity tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Salinity tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Drought tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Drought and salt tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ |
| [ |
|
|
| Drought tolerance | Knock-in | HDR | [ | |
|
| Salinity tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | ||
|
|
| Salinity tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Cold tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Drought tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | PEG-mediated transformation | [ |
|
|
| Cold tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Drought and salinity tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Drought tolerance | Knockout | HDR | Particle bombardment | [ |
|
|
| Drought tolerance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Multiple stress tolerance | Knockout | HDR | Particle bombardment | [ |
Description: NAC transcription factor coding gene (OsNAC041), Small Ubiquitin-like Modifier (OsOTS1), Two-component response regulator (OsRR22), Regulatory protein NPR1 (SlNPR1), dsRNA-binding protein (Drb), NAC domain-containing protein 2 (OsNAC14), ABA-activated protein kinase 1 (SAPK1), Sodium transporter HKT1 (ZmHKT1), C-repeat-binding factor-1 (SlCBF1), Wheat dehydration responsive element binding protein 2 (TaDREB2), Wheat ethylene responsive factor 3 (TaDREB3), Aluminum-induced protein superfamily pseudogene (ARGOS8), Mitogen-activated protein kinase 3 (SlMAPK3), Mitogen-activated protein kinase 2 (OsMPK2).
Summary of CRISPR/Cas9 applications in major crops for yield and quality improvement.
| Crop | Target Gene | Trait Improvement | Editing | Repair Mechanism | Delivery Technique | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| Grain weight | Knockout | HR | Particle bombardment | [ |
|
|
| Grain yield | Knock-in | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| High-tillering | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Delayed flowering | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Grain weight | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
| Early heading | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | ||
|
|
| Grain weight | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Early yielding | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Grain size | Knock-in | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Improved yield | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
| Grain weight | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | ||
|
|
| Kernel weight | Knockout | HDR | Particle bombardment | [ |
|
|
| Low gluten | Knockout | HDR | Particle bombardment | [ |
|
|
| Enhanced glutinosity | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| long shelf life | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Increased lycopene | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Amylose, starch resistance | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Improved oil quality | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
|
| Increase amylopectin/amylose | Knockout | NHEJ | PEG-mediated transfection | [ |
|
|
| Enhance Υ-Aminobutyric acid | Knockout | NHEJ | [ | |
|
| Reduced zein protein | Knockout | NHEJ | [ |
Description: Carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase 7, chloroplastic-like (CCD7), Phosphatidylethanolamine-binding protein FT2a (FT2a), Protein IQ-DOMAIN 14 (GW5), Protein SELF PRUNING 5G (SP5G), Growth-regulating factor 4-like (GRF4), Glutathione synthetase (GS3), Protein STRICTOSIDINE SYNTHASE-LIKE 10 (TGW6), Cytokinin dehydrogenase 2-like (Gn1a), Keratin-associated protein 5-5 (DEP1), Ubiquitin-protein ligase (GW2), GA-induced protein (GASR7), Senescence-inducible chloroplast stay-green protein 1 (SGR1), Lycopene epsilon-cyclase (LCY-E), Glycoside hydrolase family 13 protein (SBEIIb), Granule-bound starch synthase (GBSS), 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase 2 (GAD2), Pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR), Ribosomal protein lateral (RPL).