Somatic CRISPR/Cas9-mediated tumour suppressor disruption enables versatile brain tumour modelling

Marc Zuckermann(German Cancer Research Center), Volker Hovestadt(German Cancer Research Center), Christiane B. Knobbe‐Thomsen(Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf), Marc Zapatka(German Cancer Research Center), Paul A. Northcott(German Cancer Research Center), Kathrin Schramm(German Cancer Research Center), Jelena Belic(German Cancer Research Center), David Jones(German Cancer Research Center), Barbara R. Tschida(University of Minnesota), Branden S. Moriarity(University of Minnesota), David A. Largaespada(University of Minnesota), Martine F. Roussel(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Andrey Korshunov(German Cancer Research Center), Guido Reifenberger(Deutschen Konsortium für Translationale Krebsforschung), Stefan M. Pfister(German Cancer Research Center), Peter Lichter(German Cancer Research Center), Daisuke Kawauchi(German Cancer Research Center), Jan Gronych(German Cancer Research Center)
Nature Communications
June 11, 2015
Cited by 301Open Access
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Abstract

In vivo functional investigation of oncogenes using somatic gene transfer has been successfully exploited to validate their role in tumorigenesis. For tumour suppressor genes this has proven more challenging due to technical aspects. To provide a flexible and effective method for investigating somatic loss-of-function alterations and their influence on tumorigenesis, we have established CRISPR/Cas9-mediated somatic gene disruption, allowing for in vivo targeting of TSGs. Here we demonstrate the utility of this approach by deleting single (Ptch1) or multiple genes (Trp53, Pten, Nf1) in the mouse brain, resulting in the development of medulloblastoma and glioblastoma, respectively. Using whole-genome sequencing (WGS) we characterized the medulloblastoma-driving Ptch1 deletions in detail and show that no off-targets were detected in these tumours. This method provides a fast and convenient system for validating the emerging wealth of novel candidate tumour suppressor genes and the generation of faithful animal models of human cancer.


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