4.7 Article

High-efficiency non-mosaic CRISPR-mediated knock-in and indel mutation in F0 Xenopus

Journal

DEVELOPMENT
Volume 144, Issue 15, Pages 2852-2858

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dev.152967

Keywords

CRISPR/Cas9; F0; Xenopus tropicalis; Xenopus laevis; Homology-directed repair (HDR); Non-mosaic

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [P30 DK078392, K01 DK101618]

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The revolution in CRISPR-mediated genome editing has enabled the mutation and insertion of virtually any DNA sequence, particularly in cell culture where selection can be used to recover relatively rare homologous recombination events. The efficient use of this technology in animal models still presents a number of challenges, including the time to establish mutant lines, mosaic gene editing in founder animals, and low homologous recombination rates. Here we report a method for CRISPR-mediated genome editing in Xenopus oocytes with homology-directed repair (HDR) that provides efficient non-mosaic targeted insertion of small DNA fragments (40-50 nucleotides) in 4.4-25.7% of F0 tadpoles, with germline transmission. For both CRISPR/Cas9-mediated HDR gene editing and indel mutation, the gene-edited F0 embryos are uniformly heterozygous, consistent with a mutation in only the maternal genome. In addition to efficient tagging of proteins in vivo, this HDR methodology will allow researchers to create patient-specific mutations for human disease modeling in Xenopus.

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