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Proxies of CRISPR/Cas9 Activity To Aid in the Identification of Mutagenized Arabidopsis Plants
by
Danna, Cristian H
, Li, Renyu
, Vavrik, Charles
in
CRISPR
/ Genes
/ Genotype & phenotype
2020
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Proxies of CRISPR/Cas9 Activity To Aid in the Identification of Mutagenized Arabidopsis Plants
by
Danna, Cristian H
, Li, Renyu
, Vavrik, Charles
in
CRISPR
/ Genes
/ Genotype & phenotype
2020
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Proxies of CRISPR/Cas9 Activity To Aid in the Identification of Mutagenized Arabidopsis Plants
Journal Article
Proxies of CRISPR/Cas9 Activity To Aid in the Identification of Mutagenized Arabidopsis Plants
2020
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Overview
CRISPR/Cas9 has become the preferred gene-editing technology to obtain loss-of-function mutants in plants, and hence a valuable tool to study gene function. This is mainly due to the easy reprogramming of Cas9 specificity using customizable small non-coding RNAs, and to the possibility of editing several independent genes simultaneously. Despite these advances, the identification of CRISPR-edited plants remains time and resource-intensive. Here, based on the premise that one editing event in one locus is a good predictor of editing event/s in other locus/loci, we developed a CRISPR co-editing selection strategy that greatly facilitates the identification of CRISPR-mutagenized Arabidopsis thaliana plants. This strategy is based on targeting the gene/s of interest simultaneously with a proxy of CRISPR-Cas9-directed mutagenesis. The proxy is an endogenous gene whose loss-of-function produces an easy-to-detect visible phenotype that is unrelated to the expected phenotype of the gene/s under study. We tested this strategy via assessing the frequency of co-editing of three functionally unrelated proxy genes. We found that each proxy predicted the occurrence of mutations in each surrogate gene with efficiencies ranging from 68 to 100%. The selection strategy laid out here provides a framework to facilitate the identification of multiplex edited plants, thus aiding in the study of gene function when functional redundancy hinders the effort to define gene-function-phenotype links.
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Subject
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