Abstract

BackgroundGene editing using the CRISPR/Cas9 system has become a routinely applied method in several plant species. The most convenient gene delivery system is Agrobacterium-mediated gene transfer with antibiotic selection and stable genomic integration of transgenes, including Cas9. For elimination of transgenes in the segregating progeny, selfing is applied in many plant species. This approach, however, cannot be widely employed in potato because most of the commercial potato cultivars are self-incompatible.ResultsIn this study, the efficiency of a transient Cas9 expression system with positive/negative selection based on codA-nptII fusion was tested. The PHYTOENE DESATURASE (PDS) gene involved in carotenoid biosynthesis was targeted. A new vector designated PROGED::gPDS carrying only the right border of T-DNA was constructed. Using only the positive selection function of PROGED::gPDS and the restriction enzyme site loss method in PCR of genomic DNA after digestion with the appropriate restriction enzyme, it was demonstrated that the new vector is as efficient in gene editing as a traditional binary vector with right- and left-border sequences. Nevertheless, 2 weeks of positive selection followed by negative selection did not result in the isolation of PDS mutants. In contrast, we found that with 3-day positive selection, PDS mutants appear in the regenerating population with a minimum frequency of 2–10%. Interestingly, while large deletions (> 100 bp) were generated by continuous positive selection, the 3-day selection resulted in deletions and substitutions of only a few bp. Two albinos and three chimaeras with white and green leaf areas were found among the PDS mutants, while all the other PDS mutant plants were green. Based on DNA sequence analysis some of the green plants were also chimaeras. Upon vegetative propagation from stem segments in vitro, the phenotype of the plants obtained even by positive selection did not change, suggesting that the expression of Cas9 and gPDS is silenced or that the DNA repair system is highly active during the vegetative growth phase in potato.ConclusionsGene-edited plants can be obtained from potatoes by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation with 3-day antibiotic selection with a frequency high enough to identify the mutants in the regenerating plant population using PCR.

Highlights

  • Gene editing using the Clustered Regulatory Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeat (CRISPR)/Cas9 system has become a routinely applied method in several plant species

  • We demonstrate that while no transgenefree mutants could be obtained after 2 weeks of positive selection followed by negative selection, Km selection for 3 days resulted in the generation of transgene-free PHYTOENE DESATURASE (PDS) mutants with a minimum frequency of 2–10%

  • Construction and testing the efficiency of a novel vector for gene editing We previously reported that a binary vector, designated PROGMO, utilising an R/Rs recombinase system and a codA-nptII bi-functional, positive/negative selectable marker gene was successfully used for the generation of marker- and backbone-free transgenic potato plants [15]

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Summary

Introduction

Gene editing using the CRISPR/Cas system has become a routinely applied method in several plant species. For elimination of transgenes in the segregating progeny, selfing is applied in many plant species. The Cas used was derived from Streptococcus pyogenes and codon-optimised for rice [5] It was driven by the CaMV 35S promoter and cloned with the U6 promoter::sgRNA into the binary vector pCAMBIA2300 and designated CP025. To test whether this CRISPR/Cas construct can introduce gene knockouts via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, the IAA2 encoding an auxin/indole-3-acetic acid family member protein was targeted in the double-haploid DM potato. Mono- and biallelic homozygous mutants, as well as heterozygous plants, were obtained without off-target mutations, demonstrating that the CRISPR/Cas system can be used for targeted mutagenesis in potato

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