Abstract
A persistent concern with CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing has been the potential to generate mutations at off-target genomic sites. While CRISPR-engineering mice to delete a ~360 bp intronic enhancer, here we discovered a founder line that had marked immune dysregulation caused by a 24 kb tandem duplication of the sequence adjacent to the on-target deletion. Our results suggest unintended repair of on-target genomic cuts can cause pathogenic “bystander” mutations that escape detection by routine targeted genotyping assays.
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CITATION STYLE
Simeonov, D. R., Brandt, A. J., Chan, A. Y., Cortez, J. T., Li, Z., Woo, J. M., … Marson, A. (2019). A large CRISPR-induced bystander mutation causes immune dysregulation. Communications Biology, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-019-0321-x
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