Abstract

Multiple advances have been made to increase the efficiency of CRISPR/Cas9 editing using the model genetic organism Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans). Here we report on the use of co-CRISPR ‘marker’ genes: worms in which co-CRISPR events have occurred have overt, visible phenotypes which facilitates the selection of worms that harbour CRISPR events in the target gene. Mutation in the co-CRISPR gene is then removed by outcrossing to wild type but this can be challenging if the CRISPR and co-CRISPR gene are hard to segregate. However, segregating away the co-CRISPR modified gene can be less challenging if the worms selected appear wild type and are selected from a jackpot brood. These are broods in which a high proportion of the progeny of a single injected worm display the co-CRISPR phenotype suggesting high CRISPR efficiency. This can deliver worms that harbour the desired mutation in the target gene locus without the co-CRISPR mutation. We have successfully generated a discrete mutation in the C. elegans nlg-1 gene using this method. However, in the process of sequencing to authenticate editing in the nlg-1 gene we discovered genomic rearrangements that arise at the co-CRISPR gene unc-58 that by visual observation were phenotypically silent but nonetheless resulted in a significant reduction in motility scored by thrashing behaviour. This highlights that careful consideration of the hidden consequences of co-CRISPR mediated genetic changes should be taken before downstream analysis of gene function. Given this, we suggest sequencing of co-CRISPR genes following CRISPR procedures that utilise phenotypic selection as part of the pipeline.

Highlights

  • Identified as a mechanism of bacterial immunity [1], CRISPR/Cas9 is a widely used genome editing technique that allows for precise and customisable DNA modification [2]

  • The use of co-CRISPR genes facilitated the generation of a precise nlg-1 edit

  • 84 N2 animals were injected with plasmids encoding Cas9 and a single guide RNA (sgRNA) and repair template designed to transplant a d10 sequence [15] into the gene of interest, nlg-1

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Summary

Introduction

Identified as a mechanism of bacterial immunity [1], CRISPR/Cas is a widely used genome editing technique that allows for precise and customisable DNA modification [2]. Cas endonuclease cleavage of DNA results in a double strand break which can be repaired via homology directed repair (HDR) or non-homologous end joining (NHEJ). Confounds of using the co-CRISPR selection marker unc-58 data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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