We injected mouse zygotes with combinations of Cas9 protein, Cas9 mRNA, and two gRNAs targeting a single exon of type I interferon receptor (IFNAR1) to determine the gene targeting efficiencies. Cas9 protein produced on-target mutations more efficiently than Cas9 mRNA when each was used with a single gRNA, regardless of which gRNA was used. When Cas9 mRNA and Cas9 protein were co-injected, the on-target efficiency could reach 97.0% when both gRNAs were used, which was higher than when either gRNA was used alone (61.3% and 75.5%, respectively; P<0.05). Co-injection of Cas9 protein with both gRNAs produced the highest on-target mutation rate of any combination (100.0%). Most on-target mutations were deletions of 2 to 113 nucleotides, and there were few off-target mutations in mutant animals. The expression intensity of IFNAR1 was reduced in heterozygous IFNAR1 +/- mice (IF) and almost or completely absent in homozygous null IFNAR -/- mice compared with that in wild-type mice (IF and Western blot). When both gRNAs targeting IFNAR1 were used simultaneously with two gRNAs targeting FVII, the on-target editing efficiency on each gene was 96.8% and 85.5%, respectively. Co-injection of dual gRNAs and Cas9 protein is an efficient approach for IFNAR1 knockout and multi-gene editing in mice and may be applied in other animal models and breeding livestock.
Keywords: Cas9 protein; IFNAR1; Mice; dual gRNAs; knockout.
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