4.7 Article

Digital detection of endonuclease mediated gene disruption in the HIV provirus

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/srep20064

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [U19 AI 096111]
  2. University of Washington Center for AIDS Research (CFAR)
  3. NIH - (NIAID) [P30 AI 027757]
  4. NIH - (NCI) [P30 AI 027757]
  5. NIH - (NIMH) [P30 AI 027757]
  6. NIH - (NIDA) [P30 AI 027757]
  7. NIH - (NICHD) [P30 AI 027757]
  8. NIH - (NHLBI) [P30 AI 027757]
  9. NIH - (NIA) [P30 AI 027757]
  10. NIH - (NIGMS) [P30 AI 027757]
  11. NIH - (NIDDK) [P30 AI 027757]
  12. James B. Pendleton Charitable Trust

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Genome editing by designer nucleases is a rapidly evolving technology utilized in a highly diverse set of research fields. Among all fields, the T7 endonuclease mismatch cleavage assay, or Surveyor assay, is the most commonly used tool to assess genomic editing by designer nucleases. This assay, while relatively easy to perform, provides only a semi-quantitative measure of mutation efficiency that lacks sensitivity and accuracy. We demonstrate a simple droplet digital PCR assay that quickly quantitates a range of indel mutations with detection as low as 0.02% mutant in a wild type background and precision (<= 6% CV) and accuracy superior to either mismatch cleavage assay or clonal sequencing when compared to next-generation sequencing. The precision and simplicity of this assay will facilitate comparison of gene editing approaches and their optimization, accelerating progress in this rapidly-moving field.

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