3.8 Article

Efficiency, Specificity and Temperature Sensitivity of Cas9 and Cas12a RNPs for DNA-free Genome Editing in Plants

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENOME EDITING
Volume 3, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgeed.2021.760820

Keywords

Nicotiana benthamiana; pennycress; protoplast; ribonucleoprotein; Setaria viridis; soybean; transfection; transformation

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This study established an efficient and simplified protoplast-based genome editing platform for CRISPR-Cas RNP delivery, and evaluated the efficiency, specificity, and temperature sensitivity of six Cas9 and Cas12a proteins. The results showed that RNP delivery exhibited high activity in plants and achieved high mutagenesis efficiency at the preferred temperature for plant transformation and tissue culture.
Delivery of genome editing reagents using CRISPR-Cas ribonucleoproteins (RNPs) transfection offers several advantages over plasmid DNA-based delivery methods, including reduced off-target editing effects, mitigation of random integration of non-native DNA fragments, independence of vector constructions, and less regulatory restrictions. Compared to the use in animal systems, RNP-mediated genome editing is still at the early development stage in plants. In this study, we established an efficient and simplified protoplast-based genome editing platform for CRISPR-Cas RNP delivery, and then evaluated the efficiency, specificity, and temperature sensitivity of six Cas9 and Cas12a proteins. Our results demonstrated that Cas9 and Cas12a RNP delivery resulted in genome editing frequencies (8.7-41.2%) at various temperature conditions, 22 degrees C, 26 degrees C, and 37 degrees C, with no significant temperature sensitivity. LbCas12a often exhibited the highest activities, while AsCas12a demonstrated higher sequence specificity. The high activities of CRISPR-Cas RNPs at 22 degrees and 26 degrees C, the temperature preferred by plant transformation and tissue culture, led to high mutagenesis efficiencies (34.0-85.2%) in the protoplast-regenerated calli and plants with the heritable mutants recovered in the next generation. This RNP delivery approach was further extended to pennycress (Thlaspi arvense), soybean (Glycine max) and Setaria viridis with up to 70.2% mutagenesis frequency. Together, this study sheds light on the choice of RNP reagents to achieve efficient transgene-free genome editing in plants.

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