Knockout of myostatin by zinc-finger nuclease in sheep fibroblasts and embryos

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Abstract

Myostatin (MSTN) can negatively regulate the growth and development of skeletal muscle, and natural mutations can cause "double-muscling" trait in animals. In order to block the inhibiting effect of MSTN on muscle growth, we transferred zinc-finger nucleases (ZFN) which targeted sheep MSTN gene into cultured fibroblasts. Gene targeted colonies were isolated from transfected fibroblasts by serial dilution culture and screened by sequencing. Two colonies were identified with mono-allele mutation and one colony with bi-allelic deletion. Further, we introduced the MSTN-ZFN mRNA into sheep embryos by microinjection. Thirteen of thirtyseven parthenogenetic embryos were targeted by ZFN, with the efficiency of 35%. Our work established the technical foundation for generation of MSTN gene editing sheep by somatic cloning and microinjection ZFN into embryos.

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Zhang, X., Wang, L., Wu, Y., Li, W., An, J., Zhang, F., & Liu, M. (2016). Knockout of myostatin by zinc-finger nuclease in sheep fibroblasts and embryos. Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences, 29(10), 1500–1507. https://doi.org/10.5713/ajas.16.0130

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