4.6 Article

BAd-CRISPR: Inducible gene knockout in interscapular brown adipose tissue of adult mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 297, Issue 6, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2021.101402

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Funding

  1. NIH [R01 DK121759, R01 DK125513, T32 GM835326, F31 DK122723, T32 DK071212, F32 DK122654, T32 DK101357, F32 DK123887]
  2. American Diabetes Association [1-18-PDF-087]

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The BAd-CRISPR methodology allows for rapid interrogation of the function of one or multiple genes in brown adipose tissue, demonstrating efficient knockout of target genes and minimal off-target mutations. This approach was used to create an inducible UNC1 knockout mouse model, revealing molecular adaptations and changes in gene expression associated with heat production and cellular inefficiencies in brown adipose tissue. These findings highlight the potential of BAd-CRISPR as an efficient tool for accelerating discoveries in adipose tissue biology.
CRISPR/Cas9 has enabled inducible gene knockout in numerous tissues; however, its use has not been reported in brown adipose tissue (BAT). Here, we developed the brown adipocyte CRISPR (BAd-CRISPR) methodology to rapidly interrogate the function of one or multiple genes. With BAd-CRISPR, an adeno-associated virus (AAV8) expressing a single guide RNA (sgRNA) is administered directly to BAT of mice expressing Cas9 in brown adipocytes. We show that the local administration of AAV8-sgRNA to interscapular BAT of adult mice robustly transduced brown adipocytes and ablated expression of adiponectin, adipose triglyceride lipase, fatty acid synthase, perilipin 1, or stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 by >90%. Administration of multiple AAV8 sgRNAs led to simultaneous knockout of up to three genes. BAd-CRISPR induced frame-shift mutations and suppressed target gene mRNA expression but did not lead to substantial accumulation of off-target mutations in BAT. We used BAd-CRISPR to create an inducible uncoupling protein 1 (ucp1) knockout mouse to assess the effects of UCP1 loss on adaptive thermogenesis in adult mice. Inducible ucp1 knockout did not alter core body temperature; however, BAd-CRISPR ucp1 mice had elevated circulating concentrations of fibroblast growth factor 21 and changes in BAT gene expression consistent with heat production through increased peroxisomal lipid oxidation. Other molecular adaptations predict additional cellular inefficiencies with an increase in both protein synthesis and turnover, and mitochondria with reduced reliance on mitochondrial-encoded gene expression and increased expression of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes. These data suggest that BAd-CRISPR is an efficient tool to speed discoveries in adipose tissue biology.

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