1. Developing a de novo targeted knock-in method based on in utero electroporation into the mammalian brain
- Author
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Yuji Tsunekawa, Taeko Suetsugu, Fumio Matsuzaki, Atsunori Shitamukai, Raymond Kunikane Terhune, and Ikumi Fujita
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Mouse ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Biology ,Lineage tracing ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Techniques and Resources ,Gene knockin ,Gene expression ,Animals ,Ferret ,CRISPR ,CAS9 ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Gene knockout ,Cas9 ,Electroporation ,Brain ,Gene targeting ,Molecular biology ,Gene knock-in ,030104 developmental biology ,CRISPR-Cas Systems ,In utero electroporation ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Genome-editing technology has revolutionized the field of biology. Here, we report a novel de novo gene-targeting method mediated by in utero electroporation into the developing mammalian brain. Electroporation of donor DNA with the CRISPR/Cas9 system vectors successfully leads to knock-in of the donor sequence, such as EGFP, to the target site via the homology-directed repair mechanism. We developed a targeting vector system optimized to prevent anomalous leaky expression of the donor gene from the plasmid, which otherwise often occurs depending on the donor sequence. The knock-in efficiency of the electroporated progenitors reached up to 40% in the early stage and 20% in the late stage of the developing mouse brain. Furthermore, we inserted different fluorescent markers into the target gene in each homologous chromosome, successfully distinguishing homozygous knock-in cells by color. We also applied this de novo gene targeting to the ferret model for the study of complex mammalian brains. Our results demonstrate that this technique is widely applicable for monitoring gene expression, visualizing protein localization, lineage analysis and gene knockout, all at the single-cell level, in developmental tissues., Summary: A novel targeted knock-in technique based on CRISPR/Cas9 and in utero electroporation enables detection of homozygous knock-in based on dual fluorescent reporters in both mouse and ferret.
- Published
- 2016