AI Article Synopsis

  • Virus vectors like potato virus X (PVX) can deliver genome-editing tools such as SpCas9 into plant cells, but the large size of SpCas9 limits its effectiveness in systemic leaves.
  • Smaller Cas variants like AsCas12f have been engineered to improve genome-editing activity, and the modified AsCas12f demonstrated enhanced editing frequencies in rice.
  • The study found that a PVX vector with AsCas12f allowed efficient genome editing not only in inoculated leaves but also in systemic leaves, achieving over 60% regeneration of genome-edited shoots without foreign DNA.

Article Abstract

Because virus vectors can spread systemically autonomously, they are powerful vehicles with which to deliver genome-editing tools into plant cells. Indeed, a vector based on a positive-strand RNA virus, potato virus X (PVX), harboring SpCas9 and its single guide RNA (sgRNA), achieved targeted mutagenesis in inoculated leaves of . However, the large size of the gene makes it unstable in the PVX vector, hampering the introduction of mutations in systemic leaves. Smaller Cas variants are promising tools for virus vector-mediated genome editing; however, they exhibit far lower nuclease activity than SpCas9. Recently, AsCas12f, one of the smallest known Cas proteins so far (one-third the size of SpCas9), was engineered to improve genome-editing activity dramatically. Here, we first confirmed that engineered AsCas12f variants including I123Y/D195K/D208R/V232A exhibited enhanced genome-editing frequencies in rice. Then, a PVX vector harboring this AsCas12f variant was inoculated into leaves by agroinfiltration. Remarkably, and unlike with PVX-SpCas9, highly efficient genome editing was achieved, not only in PVX-AsCas12f-inoculated leaves but also in leaves above the inoculated leaf (fourth to sixth upper leaves). Moreover, genome-edited shoots regenerated from systemic leaves were obtained at a rate of >60%, enabling foreign DNA-free genome editing. Taken together, our results demonstrate that AsCas12f is small enough to be maintained in the PVX vector during systemic infection in and that engineered AsCas12f offers advantages over SpCas9 for plant genome editing using virus vectors.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11423357PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2024.1454554DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

genome editing
16
pvx vector
12
positive-strand rna
8
rna virus
8
highly efficient
8
targeted mutagenesis
8
virus vectors
8
inoculated leaves
8
systemic leaves
8
engineered ascas12f
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!