Publication | Open Access
Highly efficient genome editing via CRISPR–Cas9 in human pluripotent stem cells is achieved by transient BCL-XL overexpression
117
Citations
66
References
2018
Year
EngineeringIn Vivo Gene TherapyGeneticsMolecular BiologyStem Cell BiologyGenome EngineeringTransient Bcl-xl OverexpressionStem CellsOff-target EffectCell ModificationHighly Efficient GenomeHuman Ipsc GenomesStem Cell TherapiesGenome EditingCell EngineeringCell BiologyGene TherapiesInduced Pluripotent Stem CellStem Cell EngineeringSynthetic BiologyGenetic EngineeringStem Cell ResearchGene EditingMedicineCrisprIpsc Lines
Genome editing of human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) is instrumental for functional genomics, disease modeling, and regenerative medicine. However, low editing efficiency has hampered the applications of CRISPR-Cas9 technology in creating knockin (KI) or knockout (KO) iPSC lines, which is largely due to massive cell death after electroporation with editing plasmids. Here, we report that the transient delivery of BCL-XL increases iPSC survival by ∼10-fold after plasmid transfection, leading to a 20- to 100-fold increase in homology-directed repair (HDR) KI efficiency and a 5-fold increase in non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) KO efficiency. Treatment with a BCL inhibitor ABT-263 further improves HDR efficiency by 70% and KO efficiency by 40%. The increased genome editing efficiency is attributed to higher expressions of Cas9 and sgRNA in surviving cells after electroporation. HDR or NHEJ efficiency reaches 95% with dual editing followed by selection of cells with HDR insertion of a selective gene. Moreover, KO efficiency of 100% can be achieved in a bulk population of cells with biallelic HDR KO followed by double selection, abrogating the necessity for single cell cloning. Taken together, these simple yet highly efficient editing strategies provide useful tools for applications ranging from manipulating human iPSC genomes to creating gene-modified animal models.
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