Repositorium

What is a repositorium?

The repositorium is a searchable database that provides data on relevant articles from journals, company web pages and web pages of governmental agencies about studies/applications of genome-editing in model plants and agricultural crops in the period January 1996 to May 2018. Search options are article type, technique, plant, traits or free text. The repositorium is based on the systematic map of Dominik Modrzejewski et al., published in the journal environmental evidence. (Download article PDF).

RNA-guided Cas9 as an in vivo desired-target mutator in maize


Typ / Jahr

Journal Article / 2017

Autoren

Li, Chuxi; Liu, Changlin; Qi, Xiantao; Wu, Yongchun; Fei, Xiaohong; Mao, Long; Cheng, Beijiu; Li, Xinhai; Xie, Chuanxiao

Abstract

The RNA-guided Cas9 system is a versatile tool for genome editing. Here, we established a RNA-guided endonuclease (RGEN) system as an in vivo desired-target mutator (DTM) in maize to reduce the linkage drag during breeding procedure, using the LIGULELESS1 (LG1) locus as a proof-of-concept. Our system showed 51.5%-91.2% mutation frequency in T0 transgenic plants. We then crossed the T1 plants stably expressing DTM with six diverse recipient maize lines and found that 11.79%-28.71% of the plants tested were mutants induced by the DTM effect. Analysis of successive F2 plants indicated that the mutations induced by the DTM effect were largely heritable. Moreover, DTM-generated hybrids had significantly smaller leaf angles that were reduced more than 50% when compared with that of the wild type. Planting experiments showed that DTM-generated maize plants can be grown with significantly higher density and hence greater yield potential. Our work demonstrate that stably expressed RGEN could be implemented as an in vivoDTM to rapidly generate and spread desired mutations in maize through hybridization and subsequent backcrossing, and hence bypassing the linkage drag effect in convention introgression methodology. This proof-of-concept experiment can be a potentially much more efficient breeding strategy in crops employing the RNA-guided Cas9 genome editing.

Keywords
desired-target mutator; genome editing; sexual plant breeding
Periodical
Plant biotechnology journal
Periodical Number
12
Page range
1566–1576
Volume
15
DOI
10.1111/pbi.12739

Techniques

ID Corresponding Author
Country
Plant Species GE Technique
Sequence Identifier
Trait
Type of Alteration
Progress in Research
Key Topic
1015 Xie, Chuanxiao
China
Zea mays CRISPR/Cas9
LG1
Compact plant type with upright leaves
SDN1
Basic research
Basic research