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One-step genome editing of elite crop germplasm during haploid induction.

Timothy KelliherDakota StarrXiujuan SuGuozhu TangZhongying ChenJared CarterPeter E WittichShujie DongJulie GreenErin BurchJamie McCuistonWeining GuYuejin SunTim StrebeJames RobertsNic J BateQiudeng Que
Published in: Nature biotechnology (2019)
Genome editing using CRISPR-Cas9 works efficiently in plant cells1, but delivery of genome-editing machinery into the vast majority of crop varieties is not possible using established methods2. We co-opted the aberrant reproductive process of haploid induction (HI)3-6 to induce edits in nascent seeds of diverse monocot and dicot species. Our method, named HI-Edit, enables direct genomic modification of commercial crop varieties. HI-Edit was tested in field and sweet corn using a native haploid-inducer line4 and extended to dicots using an engineered CENH3 HI system7. We also recovered edited wheat embryos using Cas9 delivered by maize pollen. Our data indicate that a transient hybrid state precedes uniparental chromosome elimination in maize HI. Edited haploid plants lack both the haploid-inducer parental DNA and the editing machinery. Therefore, edited plants could be used in trait testing and directly integrated into commercial variety development.
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