Highly efficient generation of sheep with a defined FecBB mutation via adenine base editing.
Shiwei ZhouYige DingJiao LiuYao LiuXiaoe ZhaoGuanwei LiChenguang ZhangChao LiYing WangPeter KaldsYawei GaoBo ZongXiaoyu HuangShuhong HuangHonghao YuQifang KouBjoern PetersenXingxu HuangXiaolong WangBaohua MaYulin ChenPublished in: Genetics, selection, evolution : GSE (2020)
Base editing has the potential to improve important economic traits in agriculture and can precisely convert single nucleotides in DNA or RNA sequences into minimal double-strand DNA breaks (DSB). Adenine base editors (ABE) have recently emerged as a base editing tool for the conversion of targeted A:T to G:C, but have not yet been used in sheep. ABEmax is one of the latest versions of ABE, which consists of a catalytically-impaired nuclease and a laboratory-evolved DNA-adenosine deaminase. The Booroola fecundity (FecBB) mutation (g.A746G, p.Q249R) in the bone morphogenetic protein receptor 1B (BMPR1B) gene influences fecundity in many sheep breeds. In this study, by using ABEmax we successfully obtained lambs with defined point mutations that result in an amino acid substitution (p.Gln249Arg). The efficiency of the defined point mutations was 75% in newborn lambs, since six lambs were heterozygous at the FecBB mutation site (g.A746G, p.Q249R), and two lambs were wild-type. We did not detect off-target mutations in the eight edited lambs. Here, we report the validation of the first gene-edited sheep generated by ABE and highlight its potential to improve economically important traits in livestock.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- highly efficient
- circulating tumor
- genome wide
- cell free
- single molecule
- wild type
- nucleic acid
- amino acid
- copy number
- climate change
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- early onset
- dna methylation
- genetic diversity
- cancer therapy
- genome wide identification
- circulating tumor cells
- transcription factor
- dna binding