| Literature DB >> 32013077 |
Steven Erwood1,2, Bin Gu3.
Abstract
Endonuclease-mediated genome editing technologies, most notably CRISPR/Cas9, have revolutionized animal genetics by allowing for precise genome editing directly through embryo manipulations. As endonuclease-mediated model generation became commonplace, large fragment knock-in remained one of the most challenging types of genetic modification. Due to their unique value in biological and biomedical research, however, a diverse range of technological innovations have been developed to achieve efficient large fragment knock-in in mammalian animal model generation, with a particular focus on mice. Here, we first discuss some examples that illustrate the importance of large fragment knock-in animal models and then detail a subset of the recent technological advancements that have allowed for efficient large fragment knock-in. Finally, we envision the future development of even larger fragment knock-ins performed in even larger animal models, the next step in expanding the potential of large fragment knock-in in animal models.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR-Cas9; HDR; embryo; genome editing; large fragment knock-in
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013077 PMCID: PMC7073597 DOI: 10.3390/genes11020140
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1Visual summary of the technologies reviewed.
Summary of techniques reviewed.
| Technique | Repair Mechanism | Characterizing Features | Primary Benefits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Easi-CRISPR [ | HDR | Long single-stranded DNA donor with short homology arms | Achieves large fragment knock-in with efficiencies similar to small ssODN-based knock-ins |
| 2C-HR-CRISPR [ | HR | Microinjection into 2-cell staged embryo | Increased HR rates in 2-cell staged embryos lead to higher knock-in efficiency |
| CRISPR-READI [ | HDR | Cas9 and gRNA electroporated into embryos followed by AAV-mediated delivery of donor template | Delivery of editing components does not require zygote microinjection |
| Tild-CRISPR [ | HMEJ | Long, pre-linearized double-stranded donor with 800bp of homology | Linear double-stranded DNA donor overcomes size limitations of single-stranded DNA donors |
| CRIS-PITCh [ | MMEJ | Plasmid-based donor with short homology arms linearized via Cas9 in vivo | Functions independently of HR, and requires minimal homology arm sequences |
Figure 2Three competing outcomes from generating floxed alleles with a large donor.