An expanded toolkit for Drosophila gene tagging using synthesized homology donor constructs for CRISPR-mediated homologous recombination

Author:

Kanca Oguz12ORCID,Zirin Jonathan3,Hu Yanhui3,Tepe Burak12,Dutta Debdeep12,Lin Wen-Wen12,Ma Liwen12,Ge Ming12,Zuo Zhongyuan12,Liu Lu-Ping3,Levis Robert W4ORCID,Perrimon Norbert35ORCID,Bellen Hugo J16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine

2. Duncan Neurological Research Institute, Texas Children Hospital

3. Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School

4. Department of Embryology, Carnegie Institution for Science

5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Harvard Medical School

6. Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine

Abstract

Previously, we described a large collection of Drosophila strains that each carry an artificial exon containing a T2AGAL4 cassette inserted in an intron of a target gene based on CRISPR-mediated homologous recombination. These alleles permit numerous applications and have proven to be very useful. Initially, the homologous recombination-based donor constructs had long homology arms (>500 bps) to promote precise integration of large constructs (>5 kb). Recently, we showed that in vivo linearization of the donor constructs enables insertion of large artificial exons in introns using short homology arms (100–200 bps). Shorter homology arms make it feasible to commercially synthesize homology donors and minimize the cloning steps for donor construct generation. Unfortunately, about 58% of Drosophila genes lack a suitable coding intron for integration of artificial exons in all of the annotated isoforms. Here, we report the development of new set of constructs that allow the replacement of the coding region of genes that lack suitable introns with a KozakGAL4 cassette, generating a knock-out/knock-in allele that expresses GAL4 similarly as the targeted gene. We also developed custom vector backbones to further facilitate and improve transgenesis. Synthesis of homology donor constructs in custom plasmid backbones that contain the target gene sgRNA obviates the need to inject a separate sgRNA plasmid and significantly increases the transgenesis efficiency. These upgrades will enable the targeting of nearly every fly gene, regardless of exon–intron structure, with a 70–80% success rate.

Funder

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Office of Research Infrastructure Programs, National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Huffington Foundation

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Carnegie Institution for Science

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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