Abstract
The introduction of genome editing reagents into mammalian zygotes has traditionally been accomplished by cytoplasmic or pronuclear microinjection. This time-consuming procedure requires expensive equipment and a high level of skill. Electroporation of zygotes offers a simplified and more streamlined approach to transfect mammalian zygotes. There are a number of studies examining the parameters used in electroporation of mouse and rat zygotes. Here, we review the electroporation conditions, timing, and success rates that have been reported for mice and rats, in addition to the few reports about livestock zygotes, specifically pigs and cattle. The introduction of editing reagents at, or soon after, fertilization can help reduce the rate of mosaicism, the presence of two of more genotypes in the cells of an individual; as can the introduction of nuclease proteins rather than mRNA encoding nucleases. Mosaicism is particularly problematic in large livestock species with long generation intervals as it can take years to obtain non-mosaic, homozygous offspring through breeding. Gene knockouts accomplished via the non-homologous end joining pathway have been more widely reported and successfully accomplished using electroporation than have gene knock-ins. Delivering large DNA plasmids into the zygote is hindered by the zona pellucida (ZP), and the majority of gene knock-ins accomplished by electroporation have been using short single stranded DNA (ssDNA) repair templates, typically less than 1 kb. The most promising approach to deliver larger donor repair templates of up to 4.9 kb along with genome editing reagents into zygotes, without using cytoplasmic injection, is to use recombinant adeno-associated viruses (rAAVs) in combination with electroporation. However, similar to other methods used to deliver clustered regularly interspaced palindromic repeat (CRISPR) genome-editing reagents, this approach is also associated with high levels of mosaicism. Recent developments complementing germline ablated individuals with edited germline-competent cells offer an approach to avoid mosaicism in the germline of genome edited founder lines. Even with electroporation-mediated delivery of genome editing reagents to mammalian zygotes, there remain additional chokepoints in the genome editing pipeline that currently hinder the scalable production of non-mosaic genome edited livestock.
Highlights
Genome editing offers an opportunity to introduce targeted genetic alterations into livestock genomes
Nishio et al (2018) tested a range of voltages as well as unipolar and bipolar pulses, and the results showed that bipolar pulses and voltages over 30 V/mm resulted in significantly lower rates of blastocyst formation, whereas 25 V/mm and unipolar pulses resulted in acceptable embryo survival and editing
A homology mediated end joining (HMEJ) donor plasmid with 800 bp homology arms flanked by the clustered regularly interspaced palindromic repeat (CRISPR) Cas9 target site microinjected into bovine zygotes significantly increased the knock-in efficiency of a 1.8 kb fragment when compared to a donor plasmid with the knock-in fragment flanked by 800 bp arms alone (37.0 and 13.8%; p < 0.05), and more than a third of the knock-in embryos (36.9%) were non-mosaic
Summary
Genome editing offers an opportunity to introduce targeted genetic alterations into livestock genomes. Studies focused on the electroporation of rat and mouse zygotes have typically reported success in producing genome edited animals when using poring voltages of 25–50 V/mm and anywhere from 2 to 7 pulses (Supplementary Table S1).
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