Abstract

The development of CRISPR-associated proteins, such as Cas9, has led to increased accessibility and ease of use in genome editing. However, additional tools are needed to quantify and identify successful genome editing events in living animals. We developed a method to rapidly quantify and monitor gene editing activity non-invasively in living animals that also facilitates confocal microscopy and nucleotide level analyses. Here we report a new CRISPR “fingerprinting” approach to activating luciferase and fluorescent proteins in mice as a function of gene editing. This system is based on experience with our prior cre recombinase (cre)-detector system and is designed for Cas editors able to target loxP including gRNAs for SaCas9 and ErCas12a. These CRISPRs cut specifically within loxP, an approach that is a departure from previous gene editing in vivo activity detection techniques that targeted adjacent stop sequences. In this sensor paradigm, CRISPR activity was monitored non-invasively in living cre reporter mice (FVB.129S6(B6)-Gt(ROSA)26Sortm1(Luc)Kael/J and Gt(ROSA)26Sortm4(ACTB-tdTomato,-EGFP)Luo/J, which will be referred to as LSL-luciferase and mT/mG throughout the paper) after intramuscular or intravenous hydrodynamic plasmid injections, demonstrating utility in two diverse organ systems. The same genome-editing event was examined at the cellular level in specific tissues by confocal microscopy to determine the identity and frequency of successfully genome-edited cells. Further, SaCas9 induced targeted editing at efficiencies that were comparable to cre, demonstrating high effective delivery and activity in a whole animal. This work establishes genome editing tools and models to track CRISPR editing in vivo non-invasively and to fingerprint the identity of targeted cells. This approach also enables similar utility for any of the thousands of previously generated loxP animal models.

Highlights

  • Plasmid px601 was purchased from Addgene and consisted of a CMV-expressed Staphylococcus aureus Cas9 (SaCas9) and gRNA expression cassette flanked by associated virus (AAV) ITRs (pX601AAV-CMV::NLS-SaCas9-NLS-3xHA-bGHpA;U6::BsaI-sgRNA was a gift from Feng Zhang (Addgene plasmid #61591; http://n2t.net/addgene:61591, accessed on 15 April 2020; RRID: Addgene_61591))

  • This work shows that established reporter systems betoused to monitor that established cre-loxPcre-loxP

  • This paper showed thatcleavage loxP cleavage by SaCas9 can be comparable to cre recombinase activity in deleting stop signals in vitro or in vivo

Read more

Summary

Introduction

CRISPR-Cas technology has revolutionized the gene editing space, enabling access to the field for many new users [1]. Due to its versatility and ease of use, it is being deployed for usage in vivo as a method to treat genetic disorders requiring novel delivery methods and a means to monitor gene editing in vivo [2]. CRISPR–Cas gene editing was recently performed in humans as a treatment for Leiber’s congenital amaurosis 10 (LCA10) [3]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call