Investigating essential gene function inMycobacterium tuberculosisusing an efficient CRISPR interference system
Author(s) -
Atul K. Singh,
Xavier Carette,
LakshmiPrasad Potluri,
Jared D. Sharp,
Ranfei Xu,
Sladjana Prišić,
Robert N. Husson
Publication year - 2016
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/gkw625
Subject(s) - biology , crispr , gene , rna interference , gene expression , crispr interference , mycobacterium tuberculosis , function (biology) , cas9 , genetics , computational biology , regulation of gene expression , trans activating crrna , transcription (linguistics) , rna , tuberculosis , medicine , linguistics , philosophy , pathology
Despite many methodological advances that have facilitated investigation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis pathogenesis, analysis of essential gene function in this slow-growing pathogen remains difficult. Here, we describe an optimized CRISPR-based method to inhibit expression of essential genes based on the inducible expression of an enzymatically inactive Cas9 protein together with gene-specific guide RNAs (CRISPR interference). Using this system to target several essential genes of M. tuberculosis, we achieved marked inhibition of gene expression resulting in growth inhibition, changes in susceptibility to small molecule inhibitors and disruption of normal cell morphology. Analysis of expression of genes containing sequences similar to those targeted by individual guide RNAs did not reveal significant off-target effects. Advantages of this approach include the ability to compare inhibited gene expression to native levels of expression, lack of the need to alter the M. tuberculosis chromosome, the potential to titrate the extent of transcription inhibition, and the ability to avoid off-target effects. Based on the consistent inhibition of transcription and the simple cloning strategy described in this work, CRISPR interference provides an efficient approach to investigate essential gene function that may be particularly useful in characterizing genes of unknown function and potential targets for novel small molecule inhibitors.
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