Biallelic and gene-wide genomic substitution for endogenous intron and retroelement mutagenesis in human cells
Functional annotation of the vast noncoding landscape of the diploid human genome still remains a major challenge of genomic research. An efficient, scarless, biallelic, and gene-wide mutagenesis approach is needed for direct investigation of the functional significance of endogenous long introns in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2022-07, Vol.13 (1), p.4219-4219, Article 4219 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Functional annotation of the vast noncoding landscape of the diploid human genome still remains a major challenge of genomic research. An efficient, scarless, biallelic, and gene-wide mutagenesis approach is needed for direct investigation of the functional significance of endogenous long introns in gene regulation. Here we establish a genome substitution platform, the Universal Knock-in System or UKiS, that meets these requirements. For proof of concept, we first used UKiS on the longest intron of
TP53
in the pseudo-diploid cell line HCT116. Complete deletion of the intron, its substitution with mouse and zebrafish syntenic introns, and specific removal of retrotransposon-derived elements (retroelements) were all efficiently and accurately achieved in both alleles, revealing a suppressive role of intronic
Alu
elements in
TP53
expression. We also used UKiS for
TP53
intron deletion in human induced pluripotent stem cells without losing their stemness. Furthermore, UKiS enabled biallelic removal of all introns from three human gene loci of ~100 kb and longer to demonstrate that intron requirements for transcriptional activities vary among genes. UKiS is a standard platform with which to pursue the design of noncoding regions for genome writing in human cells.
Functional annotation of the vast noncoding landscape of the diploid human genome still remains a major challenge of genomic research. Here the authors present a scarless, biallelic, and 100 kb-scale mutagenesis in human cells that uncovers functional significances of endogenous introns and retrotransposons in the chromatin context. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-022-31982-1 |