Induction of targeted, heritable mutations in barley and Brassica oleracea using RNA-guided Cas9 nuclease
John Innes Centre · Norwich Research Park · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The RNA-guided Cas9 system represents a flexible approach for genome editing in plants. This method can create specific mutations that knock-out or alter target gene function. It provides a valuable tool for plant research and offers opportunities for crop improvement.
We investigate the use and target specificity requirements of RNA-guided Cas9 genome editing in barley (Hordeum vulgare) and Brassica oleracea by targeting multicopy genes. In barley, we target two copies of HvPM19 and observe Cas9-induced mutations in the first generation of 23 % and 10 % of the lines, respectively. In B. oleracea, targeting of BolC.GA4.a leads to Cas9-induced mutations in 10 % of first generation plants screened. In addition, a phenotypic screen identifies T0 plants with the expected dwarf phenotype associated with knock-out of the target gene. In both barley and B. oleracea stable Cas9-induced mutations are transmitted to T2 plants independently of the T-DNA construct. We observe off-target activity in both species, despite the presence of at least one mismatch between the single guide RNA and the non-target gene sequences. In barley, a transgene-free plant has concurrent mutations in the target and non-target copies of HvPM19.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.38
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 49
Authors
8Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Cas9
- Genetics
- Gene
- Brassica oleracea
- Hordeum vulgare
- Genome editing
- CRISPR