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Epigenetic Footprints of CRISPR/Cas9-Mediated Genome Editing in Plants
Author(s) -
Jun Hyung Lee,
Mitra Mazarei,
Alexander C. Pfotenhauer,
Aubrey B. Dorrough,
Magen R. Poindexter,
Tarek Hewezi,
Scott C. Lenaghan,
David E. Graham,
C. Neal Stewart
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
frontiers in plant science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.752
H-Index - 125
ISSN - 1664-462X
DOI - 10.3389/fpls.2019.01720
Subject(s) - biology , genetics , epigenetics , crispr , dna methylation , genome editing , mutagenesis , gene , genome , bisulfite sequencing , cas9 , transgene , mutation , gene expression
CRISPR/Cas9 has been widely applied to various plant species accelerating the pace of plant genome editing and precision breeding in crops. Unintended effects beyond off-target nucleotide mutations are still somewhat unexplored. We investigated the degree and patterns of epigenetic changes after gene editing. We examined changes in DNA methylation in genome-edited promoters of naturally hypermethylated genes (AT1G72350 and AT1G09970) and hypomethylated genes (AT3G17320 and AT5G28770) from Arabidopsis . Transgenic plants were developed via Agrobacterium -mediated floral dip transformation. Homozygous edited lines were selected from segregated T 2 plants by an in vitro digestion assay using ribonucleoprotein complex. Bisulfite sequencing comparisons were made between paired groups of edited and non-edited plants to identify changes in DNA methylation of the targeted loci. We found that directed mutagenesis via CRISPR/Cas9 resulted in no unintended morphological or epigenetic alterations. Phenotypes of wild-type, transgenic empty vector, and transgenic edited plants were similar. Epigenetic profiles revealed that methylation patterns of promoter regions flanking target sequences were identical among wild-type, transgenic empty vector, and transgenic edited plants. There was no effect of mutation type on epigenetic status. We also evaluated off-target mutagenesis effects in the edited plants. Potential off-target sites containing up to 4-bp mismatch of each target were sequenced. No off-target mutations were detected in candidate sites. Our results showed that CRISPR/Cas9 did not leave an epigenetic footprint on either the immediate gene-edited DNA and flanking DNA or introduce off-target mutations.

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