PubMed 34713232

PubMed ID: 34713232

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Repurposing of Anthocyanin Biosynthesis for Plant Transformation and Genome Editing.
Authors: He Yubing, Zhu Min, Wu Junhua, Ouyang Lejun, Wang Rongchen, Sun Hui, Yan Lang, Wang Lihao, Xu Meilian, Zhan Huadong, Zhao Yunde
Journal: Frontiers in genome editing (Front Genome Ed), Vol.2(), 2020

DOI: 10.1016/j.molp.2017.05.008 PMCID: PMC5007326

Abstract
CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology has been very effective in editing genes in many plant species including rice. Here we further improve the current CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology in both efficiency and time needed for isolation of transgene-free and target gene-edited plants. We coupled the CRISPR/Cas9 cassette with a unit that activates anthocyanin biosynthesis, providing a visible marker for detecting the presence of transgenes. The anthocyanin-marker assisted CRISPR (AAC) technology enables us to identify transgenic events even at calli stage, to select transformants with elevated Cas9 expression, and to identify transgene-free plants in the field. We used the AAC technology to edit LAZY1 and G1 and successfully generated many transgene-free and target gene-edited plants at T1 generation. The AAC technology greatly reduced the labor, time, and costs needed for editing target genes in rice.
Publication Types
Journal Article
Keywords
AAC CRISPR anthocyanin rice transgene-free
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