Easi-CRISPR: a robust method for one-step generation of mice carrying conditional and insertion alleles using long ssDNA donors and CRISPR ribonucleoproteins

Rolen M. Quadros(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Hiromi Miura(Tokai University), Donald W. Harms(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Hisako Akatsuka(Tokai University), Takehito Sato(Tokai University), Tomomi Aida(Tokyo Medical and Dental University), Ronald Redder(High Throughput Biology (United States)), Guy P. Richardson(University of Sussex), Yutaka Inagaki(Tokai University), Daisuke Sakai(Tokai University), Shannon M. Buckley(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Parthasarathy Seshacharyulu(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Surinder K. Batra(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Mark A. Behlke(Integrated DNA Technologies (United States)), Sarah A. Zeiner(Integrated DNA Technologies (United States)), Ashley M. Jacobi(Integrated DNA Technologies (United States)), Yayoi Izu(Chiba Institute of Science), Wallace B. Thoreson(University of Nebraska Medical Center), Lisa D. Urness(University of Utah), Suzanne L. Mansour(University of Utah), Masato Ohtsuka(Tokai University), Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy(Nebraska Medical Center)
Genome biology
May 16, 2017
Cited by 570Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Conditional knockout mice and transgenic mice expressing recombinases, reporters, and inducible transcriptional activators are key for many genetic studies and comprise over 90% of mouse models created. Conditional knockout mice are generated using labor-intensive methods of homologous recombination in embryonic stem cells and are available for only ~25% of all mouse genes. Transgenic mice generated by random genomic insertion approaches pose problems of unreliable expression, and thus there is a need for targeted-insertion models. Although CRISPR-based strategies were reported to create conditional and targeted-insertion alleles via one-step delivery of targeting components directly to zygotes, these strategies are quite inefficient. RESULTS: Here we describe Easi-CRISPR (Efficient additions with ssDNA inserts-CRISPR), a targeting strategy in which long single-stranded DNA donors are injected with pre-assembled crRNA + tracrRNA + Cas9 ribonucleoprotein (ctRNP) complexes into mouse zygotes. We show for over a dozen loci that Easi-CRISPR generates correctly targeted conditional and insertion alleles in 8.5-100% of the resulting live offspring. CONCLUSIONS: Easi-CRISPR solves the major problem of animal genome engineering, namely the inefficiency of targeted DNA cassette insertion. The approach is robust, succeeding for all tested loci. It is versatile, generating both conditional and targeted insertion alleles. Finally, it is highly efficient, as treating an average of only 50 zygotes is sufficient to produce a correctly targeted allele in up to 100% of live offspring. Thus, Easi-CRISPR offers a comprehensive means of building large-scale Cre-LoxP animal resources.


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