Efficient and risk-reduced genome editing using double nicks enhanced by bacterial recombination factors in multiple species
Author(s) -
Xiaozhen He,
Wenfeng Chen,
Zhen Liu,
Guirong Yu,
Youbang Chen,
Yijun Cai,
Ling Sun,
Wanli Xu,
Lili Zhong,
Caixi Gao,
Chen Ji-shen,
Minjie Zhang,
Shengxi Yang,
Yizhou Yao,
Zhiping Zhang,
Fujun Ma,
Chenchen Zhang,
Huiping Lu,
Bin Yu,
TianLin Cheng,
Juhui Qiu,
Qing Sheng,
HaiMeng Zhou,
Zhi-Rong Lv,
Junjun Yan,
Yongjian Zhou,
Zilong Qiu,
Zongbin Cui,
Xi Zhang,
Anming Meng,
Qiang Sun,
Yufeng Yang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkaa195
Subject(s) - biology , genome editing , recombination , genome , genetics , homologous recombination , dna , evolutionary biology , gene
Site-specific DNA double-strand breaks have been used to generate knock-in through the homology-dependent or -independent pathway. However, low efficiency and accompanying negative impacts such as undesirable indels or tumorigenic potential remain problematic. In this study, we present an enhanced reduced-risk genome editing strategy we named as NEO, which used either site-specific trans or cis double-nicking facilitated by four bacterial recombination factors (RecOFAR). In comparison to currently available approaches, NEO achieved higher knock-in (KI) germline transmission frequency (improving from zero to up to 10% efficiency with an average of 5-fold improvement for 8 loci) and ‘cleaner’ knock-in of long DNA fragments (up to 5.5 kb) into a variety of genome regions in zebrafish, mice and rats. Furthermore, NEO yielded up to 50% knock-in in monkey embryos and 20% relative integration efficiency in non-dividing primary human peripheral blood lymphocytes (hPBLCs). Remarkably, both on-target and off-target indels were effectively suppressed by NEO. NEO may also be used to introduce low-risk unrestricted point mutations effectively and precisely. Therefore, by balancing efficiency with safety and quality, the NEO method reported here shows substantial potential and improves the in vivo gene-editing strategies that have recently been developed.
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