Abstract

Nodal-related protein (ndr2) is amember of the transforming growth factor type β superfamily of factors and is required for ventral midline patterning of the embryonic central nervous system in zebrafish. In humans, mutations in the gene encoding nodal cause holoprosencephaly and heterotaxy. Mutations in the ndr2 gene in the zebrafish (Danio rerio) lead to similar phenotypes, including loss of the medial floor plate, severe deficits in ventral forebrain development and cyclopia. Alleles of the ndr2 gene have been useful in studying patterning of ventral structures of the central nervous system. Fifteen different ndr2 alleles have been reported in zebrafish, of which eight were generated using chemical mutagenesis, four were radiation-induced and the remaining alleles were obtained via random insertion, gene targeting (TALEN) or unknown methods. Therefore, most mutation sites were random and could not be predicted a priori. Using the CRISPR-Cas9 system from Streptococcus pyogenes, we targeted distinct regions in all three exons of zebrafish ndr2 and observed cyclopia in the injected (G0) embryos.We show that the use of sgRNA-Cas9 ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes can cause penetrant cyclopic phenotypes in injected (G0) embryos. Targeted polymerase chain reaction amplicon analysis using Sanger sequencing showed that most of the alleles had small indels resulting in frameshifts. The sequence information correlates with the loss of ndr2 activity. In this study, we validate multiple CRISPR targets using an in vitro nuclease assay and in vivo analysis using embryos. We describe one specific mutant allele resulting in the loss of conserved terminal cysteine-coding sequences. This study is another demonstration of the utility of the CRISPR-Cas9 system in generating domain-specific mutations and provides further insights into the structure-function of the ndr2 gene.

Highlights

  • The transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) superfamily is one of the major groups of secreted signaling molecules that is important in cell-to-cell communication and coordinating pattern formation during development [1, 2]

  • Most of the previous mutant alleles of the ndr2 gene in zebrafish were generated in forward genetic screens with ENU mutagenesis making them difficult to characterize completely at the molecular level (Supplemental Table 1)

  • Especially the CRISPR-Cas9 system, there is a surge of mutant alleles for several genes that can be very well characterized

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Summary

Introduction

The transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) superfamily is one of the major groups of secreted signaling molecules that is important in cell-to-cell communication and coordinating pattern formation during development [1, 2]. There are three NODAL-related paralogs (ndr1/squint, ndr2/cyclops, and ndr3/southpaw) that are very similar but have specialized functions. During embryogenesis cyclops (cyc)/nodal related 2 (ndr2) is required for ventral midline patterning of the central nervous system [3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11] ( referred only as ndr). Mutations in ndr in the zebrafish lead to similar phenotypes observed in humans, including loss of medial floor plate, severe deficits in ventral forebrain development, and cyclopia [3, 4, 10, 12,13,14,15,16,17,18]

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