A toolbox and procedural notes for characterizing novel zinc finger nucleases for genome editing in plant cells

Andriy Tovkach, Vardit Zeevi, Tzvi Tzfira

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

61 Scopus citations

Abstract

The induction of double-strand breaks (DSBs) in plant genomes can lead to increased homologous recombination or site-specific mutagenesis at the repair site. This phenomenon has the potential for use in gene targeting applications in plant cells upon the induction of site-specific genomic DSBs using zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs). Zinc finger nucleases are artificial restriction enzymes, custom-designed to cleave a specific DNA sequence. The tools and methods for ZFN assembly and validation could potentially boost their application for plant gene targeting. Here we report on the design of biochemical and in planta methods for the analysis of newly designed ZFNs. Cloning begins with de novo assembly of the DNA-binding regions of new ZFNs from overlapping oligonucleotides containing modified helices responsible for DNA-triplet recognition, and the fusion of the DNA-binding domain with a FokI endonuclease domain in a dedicated plant expression cassette. Following the transfer of fully assembled ZFNs into Escherichia coli expression vectors, bacterial lysates were found to be most suitable for in vitro digestion analysis of palindromic target sequences. A set of three in planta activity assays was also developed to confirm the nucleic acid digestion activity of ZFNs in plant cells. The assays are based on the reconstruction of GUS expression following transient or stable delivery of a mutated uidA and ZFN-expressing cassettes into target plants cells. Our tools and assays offer cloning flexibility and simple assembly of tested ZFNs and their corresponding target sites into Agrobacterium tumefaciens binary plasmids, allowing efficient implementation of ZFN-validation assays in planta.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)747-757
Number of pages11
JournalPlant Journal
Volume57
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2009
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Gene targeting
  • Non-homologous end joining
  • Tools
  • Zinc finger nucleases

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics
  • Plant Science
  • Cell Biology

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