PubMed 29230929

PubMed ID: 29230929

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Application of protoplast technology to CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis: from single-cell mutation detection to mutant plant regeneration.
Authors: Lin Choun-Sea, Hsu Chen-Tran, Yang Ling-Hung, Lee Lan-Ying, Fu Jin-Yuan, Cheng Qiao-Wei, Wu Fu-Hui, Hsiao Han C-W, Zhang Yesheng, Zhang Ru, Chang Wan-Jung, Yu Chen-Ting, Wang Wen, Liao Li-Jen, Gelvin Stanton B, Shih Ming-Che
Journal: Plant biotechnology journal (Plant Biotechnol J), Vol.16(7), 2018‑Jul

DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2017.03.002 PMCID: PMC4176183

Abstract
Plant protoplasts are useful for assessing the efficiency of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9) mutagenesis. We improved the process of protoplast isolation and transfection of several plant species. We also developed a method to isolate and regenerate single mutagenized Nicotianna tabacum protoplasts into mature plants. Following transfection of protoplasts with constructs encoding Cas9 and sgRNAs, target gene DNA could be amplified for further analysis to determine mutagenesis efficiency. We investigated N. tabacum protoplasts and derived regenerated plants for targeted mutagenesis of the phytoene desaturase (NtPDS) gene. Genotyping of albino regenerants indicated that all four NtPDS alleles were mutated in amphidiploid tobacco, and no Cas9 DNA could be detected in most regenerated plants.
Publication Types
Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Keywords
CRISPR/Cas9 protoplast isolation protoplast regeneration single-cell analysis
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