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High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis

With the goal to generate and characterize the phenotypes of null alleles in all genes within an organism and the recent advances in custom nucleases, genome editing limitations have moved from mutation generation to mutation detection. We previously demonstrated that High Resolution Melting (HRM) a...

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Autores principales: Thomas, Holly R., Percival, Stefanie M., Yoder, Bradley K., Parant, John M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4263700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25503746
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114632
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author Thomas, Holly R.
Percival, Stefanie M.
Yoder, Bradley K.
Parant, John M.
author_facet Thomas, Holly R.
Percival, Stefanie M.
Yoder, Bradley K.
Parant, John M.
author_sort Thomas, Holly R.
collection PubMed
description With the goal to generate and characterize the phenotypes of null alleles in all genes within an organism and the recent advances in custom nucleases, genome editing limitations have moved from mutation generation to mutation detection. We previously demonstrated that High Resolution Melting (HRM) analysis is a rapid and efficient means of genotyping known zebrafish mutants. Here we establish optimized conditions for HRM based detection of novel mutant alleles. Using these conditions, we demonstrate that HRM is highly efficient at mutation detection across multiple genome editing platforms (ZFNs, TALENs, and CRISPRs); we observed nuclease generated HRM positive targeting in 1 of 6 (16%) open pool derived ZFNs, 14 of 23 (60%) TALENs, and 58 of 77 (75%) CRISPR nucleases. Successful targeting, based on HRM of G0 embryos correlates well with successful germline transmission (46 of 47 nucleases); yet, surprisingly mutations in the somatic tail DNA weakly correlate with mutations in the germline F1 progeny DNA. This suggests that analysis of G0 tail DNA is a good indicator of the efficiency of the nuclease, but not necessarily a good indicator of germline alleles that will be present in the F1s. However, we demonstrate that small amplicon HRM curve profiles of F1 progeny DNA can be used to differentiate between specific mutant alleles, facilitating rare allele identification and isolation; and that HRM is a powerful technique for screening possible off-target mutations that may be generated by the nucleases. Our data suggest that micro-homology based alternative NHEJ repair is primarily utilized in the generation of CRISPR mutant alleles and allows us to predict likelihood of generating a null allele. Lastly, we demonstrate that HRM can be used to quickly distinguish genotype-phenotype correlations within F1 embryos derived from G0 intercrosses. Together these data indicate that custom nucleases, in conjunction with the ease and speed of HRM, will facilitate future high-throughput mutation generation and analysis needed to establish mutants in all genes of an organism.
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spelling pubmed-42637002014-12-19 High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis Thomas, Holly R. Percival, Stefanie M. Yoder, Bradley K. Parant, John M. PLoS One Research Article With the goal to generate and characterize the phenotypes of null alleles in all genes within an organism and the recent advances in custom nucleases, genome editing limitations have moved from mutation generation to mutation detection. We previously demonstrated that High Resolution Melting (HRM) analysis is a rapid and efficient means of genotyping known zebrafish mutants. Here we establish optimized conditions for HRM based detection of novel mutant alleles. Using these conditions, we demonstrate that HRM is highly efficient at mutation detection across multiple genome editing platforms (ZFNs, TALENs, and CRISPRs); we observed nuclease generated HRM positive targeting in 1 of 6 (16%) open pool derived ZFNs, 14 of 23 (60%) TALENs, and 58 of 77 (75%) CRISPR nucleases. Successful targeting, based on HRM of G0 embryos correlates well with successful germline transmission (46 of 47 nucleases); yet, surprisingly mutations in the somatic tail DNA weakly correlate with mutations in the germline F1 progeny DNA. This suggests that analysis of G0 tail DNA is a good indicator of the efficiency of the nuclease, but not necessarily a good indicator of germline alleles that will be present in the F1s. However, we demonstrate that small amplicon HRM curve profiles of F1 progeny DNA can be used to differentiate between specific mutant alleles, facilitating rare allele identification and isolation; and that HRM is a powerful technique for screening possible off-target mutations that may be generated by the nucleases. Our data suggest that micro-homology based alternative NHEJ repair is primarily utilized in the generation of CRISPR mutant alleles and allows us to predict likelihood of generating a null allele. Lastly, we demonstrate that HRM can be used to quickly distinguish genotype-phenotype correlations within F1 embryos derived from G0 intercrosses. Together these data indicate that custom nucleases, in conjunction with the ease and speed of HRM, will facilitate future high-throughput mutation generation and analysis needed to establish mutants in all genes of an organism. Public Library of Science 2014-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC4263700/ /pubmed/25503746 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114632 Text en © 2014 Thomas et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Thomas, Holly R.
Percival, Stefanie M.
Yoder, Bradley K.
Parant, John M.
High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis
title High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis
title_full High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis
title_fullStr High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis
title_full_unstemmed High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis
title_short High-Throughput Genome Editing and Phenotyping Facilitated by High Resolution Melting Curve Analysis
title_sort high-throughput genome editing and phenotyping facilitated by high resolution melting curve analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4263700/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25503746
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0114632
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