Efficient generation of targeted large insertions by microinjection into two-cell-stage mouse embryos
Author(s) -
Bin Gu,
Eszter Pósfai,
Janet Rossant
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
nature biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.358
H-Index - 445
eISSN - 1546-1696
pISSN - 1087-0156
DOI - 10.1038/nbt.4166
Subject(s) - crispr , biology , homologous recombination , genome editing , gene targeting , transgenesis , gene knockin , genetics , chromatin , cas9 , embryo , computational biology , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , embryogenesis , reproductive technology
Rapid, efficient generation of knock-in mice with targeted large insertions remains a major hurdle in mouse genetics. Here, we describe two-cell homologous recombination (2C-HR)-CRISPR, a highly efficient gene-editing method based on introducing CRISPR reagents into embryos at the two-cell stage, which takes advantage of the open chromatin structure and the likely increase in homologous-recombination efficiency during the long G2 phase. Combining 2C-HR-CRISPR with a modified biotin-streptavidin approach to localize repair templates to target sites, we achieved a more-than-tenfold increase (up to 95%) in knock-in efficiency over standard methods. We targeted 20 endogenous genes expressed in blastocysts with fluorescent reporters and generated reporter mouse lines. We also generated triple-color blastocysts with all three lineages differentially labeled, as well as embryos carrying the two-component auxin-inducible degradation system for probing protein function. We suggest that 2C-HR-CRISPR is superior to random transgenesis or standard genome-editing protocols, because it ensures highly efficient insertions at endogenous loci and defined 'safe harbor' sites.
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