| Literature DB >> 31993780 |
Leo Herbert1,2, Anne-Cécile Meunier1,2, Martine Bes1,2, Aurore Vernet1,2, Murielle Portefaix1,2, Franz Durandet1,2, Remy Michel1,2, Christian Chaine1,2, Patrice This1,2, Emmanuel Guiderdoni1,2, Christophe Périn3,4.
Abstract
Genome editing tools have greatly facilitated the functional analysis of genes of interest by targeted mutagenesis. Many usable genome editing tools, including different site-specific nucleases and editor databases that allow single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to be introduced at a given site, are now available. These tools can be used to generate high allelic diversity at a given locus to facilitate gene function studies, including examining the role of a specific protein domain or a single amino acid. We compared the effects, efficiencies and mutation types generated by our LbCPF1, SpCAS9 and base editor (BECAS9) constructs for the OsCAO1 gene. SpCAS9 and LbCPF1 have similar efficiencies in generating mutations but differ in the types of mutations induced, with the majority of changes being single-nucleotide insertions and short deletions for SpCAS9 and LbCPF1, respectively. The proportions of heterozygotes also differed, representing a majority in our LbCPF1, while with SpCAS9, we obtained a large number of biallelic mutants. Finally, we demonstrated that it is possible to specifically introduce stop codons using the BECAS9 with an acceptable efficiency of approximately 20%. Based on these results, a rational choice among these three alternatives may be made depending on the type of mutation that one wishes to introduce, the three systems being complementary. SpCAS9 remains the best choice to generate KO mutations in primary transformants, while if the desired gene mutation interferes with regeneration or viability, the use of our LbCPF1 construction will be preferred, because it produces mainly heterozygotes. LbCPF1 has been described in other studies as being as effective as SpCAS9 in generating homozygous and biallelic mutations. It will remain to be clarified in the future, whether the different LbCFP1 constructions have different efficiencies and determine the origin of these differences. Finally, if one wishes to specifically introduce stop codons, BECAS9 is a viable and efficient alternative, although it has a lower efficiency than SpCAS9 and LbCPF1 for creating KO mutations.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31993780 PMCID: PMC6987269 DOI: 10.1186/s12284-020-0366-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rice (N Y) ISSN: 1939-8425 Impact factor: 4.783
Fig. 1Binary plasmids used. From top to bottom. Binary plasmid containing the LbCPF1 sequence (Tang et al. 2017) codon-optimized for rice, under the control of the promoter pZmUBI; crRNA-CAO1 was also under the control of a pZmUBI promoter. The plant resistance marker was hygromycin. Binary plasmid containing SpCAS9 (Miao et al. 2013) codon-optimized for rice under the control of the pZmUBI promoter. sgRNA-CAO1 was under the control of the rice promoter pOsU3. The plant resistance marker was hygromycin. Plasmid containing BEnCAS9 (Zong et al. 2017) codon-optimized for rice (available on Addgene: #98163), formed by a fusion of the rat rAPOBEC1 protein (Komor et al.), the XTEN linker, the nCAS9 nickase having a mutation inactivating the catalytic domain RuvC (D10A) and the UGI protein. The original cloning sites were replaced by AttR Gateway recombination sites. sgRNA-BECAO1 targeting exon 3 of the OsCAO1 gene was under the control of the rice pOsU3 promoter. HDV: HDV ribozyme; HH: Hammerhead ribozyme. All spacers were first cloned into entry vectors and then transferred to the binary vectors by LR reactions
Fig. 2Positions and sequences of the spacers used. A) Positions of spacers and associated sequences relative to the OsCAO1 gene. PAM (CAAA (TTTN PAM on complementary strand) for LbCPF1, CCA for CAS9 (TGG (NGG on complementary strand)) and AGG for BECAS9) are shown in blue, spacers are in red, and genomic sequences are in black. B) Theoretical mutation introduced by a C- > T transversion by BECAS9, which leads to the replacement of the C nucleotide of the CAG splicing site by a T nucleotide and introduces a stop codon (TAG) instead of the amino acid glutamine
Fig. 3Mutations and associated frequencies generated by SpCAS9 A), LbCPF1 B) and BECAS9 C). PAMs are shown in blue, spacers in red, genomic sequences in black, inserted nucleotides in orange, and substituted nucleotides in green; − corresponds to a nucleotide deletion. For example, (− 15,+ 11) indicates a mutation due to a deletion of 15 nucleotides and an insertion of 11 nucleotides. (× 4) indicates the number of times this allele is found
Homozygous, heterozygous, biallelic and wild-type plants produced using SpCAS9, LbCPF1 and BE_nCAS9D10A expressed as % of analyzed regenerated plants
| Homozygous | Biallelic | Heterozygous | Wild type | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SpCAS9 ( | 37.1% (13) | 45.7% (16) | 11.4% (4) | 5.7% (2) |
| LbCPF1 ( | 12% (3) | 40% (10) | 16% (4) | 28% (7) |
| BE_nCAS9D10A ( | 13.6% (6) | 0% (0) | 22.7% (10) | 63.6% (28) |
Deletions out of frame (Out-frame), deletions that maintain reading frame (In-Frame) generated using SpCAS9, LbCPF1 and BE_nCAS9D10A expressed as % of total mutant alleles identified. A total of 60, 30 and 22 mutants alleles were identified for SpCAS9, LbCPF1 and BE_nCAS9D10A respectively (see also Fig. 3)
| InFrame | OutFrame | |
|---|---|---|
| SpCAS9 | 10% (6) | 90% (56) |
| LbCPF1 | 43% (13) | 57% (17) |
| BE_CAS9 | 95% (21) | 5% (1) |
Deletions, insertions, deletions plus insertions (Ind/del) and substitutions generated using SpCAS9, LbCPF1 and BE_nCAS9D10A expressed as % of total mutant alleles identified. A total of 60, 30 and 22 mutants alleles were identified for SpCAS9, LbCPF1 and BE_nCAS9D10A respectively (see also Fig. 3)
| Deletions | Insertions | Ind/del | Substitutions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SpCAS9 | 27% (16) | 52% (31) | 21% (13) | 0% (0) |
| LbCPF1 | 100% (30) | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | 0% (0) |
| BE_CAS9 | 9% (2) | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | 91% (20) |
Fig. 4Phenotypes associated with mutations generated by CAS9 (A) and BECAS9 (B). WT = wild type, Oscao1 = mutant induced by CAS9. (A) Twenty-nine mutants are visible among 33 mutant plants: yellow plants smaller than WT. (B) From left to right, a WT plant, a heterozygous C- > T plant, and a homozygous C- > T plant. The heterozygous and homozygous plants have a pale-yellow phenotype, as expected, and the homozygous plant is shorter than the heterozygous plant and the WT