Title Deletion of morpholino binding sites (DeMOBS) to assess specificity of morphant phenotypes /
Authors Balčiūnas, Darius ; Cunningham, Carlee MacPherson ; Bellipanni, Gianfranco ; Habas, Raymond
DOI 10.1038/s41598-020-71708-1
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Is Part of Scientific reports.. Berlin : Nature Portfolio. 2020, vol. 10, iss. 1, art. no. 15366, p. [1-7].. ISSN 2045-2322. eISSN 2045-2322
Abstract [eng] Two complimentary approaches are widely used to study gene function in zebrafish: induction of genetic mutations, usually using targeted nucleases such as CRISPR/Cas9, and suppression of gene expression, typically using Morpholino oligomers. Neither method is perfect. Morpholinos (MOs) sometimes produce off-target or toxicity-related effects that can be mistaken for true phenotypes. Conversely, genetic mutants can be subject to compensation, or may fail to yield a null phenotype due to leakiness (e.g. use of cryptic splice sites or downstream AUGs). When discrepancy between mutant and morpholino-induced (morphant) phenotypes is observed, experimental validation of such phenotypes becomes very labor intensive. We have developed a simple genetic method to differentiate between genuine morphant phenotypes and those produced due to off-target effects. We speculated that indels within 5′ untranslated regions would be unlikely to have a significant negative effect on gene expression. Mutations induced within a MO target site would result in a Morpholino-refractive allele thus suppressing true MO phenotypes whilst non-specific phenotypes would remain. We tested this hypothesis on one gene with an exclusively zygotic function, tbx5a , and one gene with strong maternal effect, ctnnb2 . We found that indels within the Morpholino binding site are indeed able to suppress both zygotic and maternal morphant phenotypes. We also observed that the ability of such indels to suppress morpholino phenotypes does depend on the size and the location of the deletion. Nonetheless, mutating the morpholino binding sites in both maternal and zygotic genes can ascertain the specificity of morphant phenotypes.
Published Berlin : Nature Portfolio
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2020
CC license CC license description