Heterokaryosis, the main obstacle in the generation of PPO1-edited Agaricus bisporus by CRISPR/Cas9 system

•Gene editing in A. bisporus generated mixture of the edited and unedited PPO1 sequences.•Disruption of heterokaryosis yielded the PPO1-edited homokaryons.•The unedited PPO1 was eventually edited by Cas9/gRNA produced from neighboring nucleus upon prolonged incubation. PPO1 gene editing in Agaricus...

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Published inScientia horticulturae Vol. 318; p. 112095
Main Authors Choi, Yeon Jae, Eom, Hyerang, Yang, Seong-Hyeok, Nandre, Rutuja, Kim, Sinil, Kim, Minseek, Oh, Youn-Lee, Nakazawa, Takehito, Honda, Yoichi, Ro, Hyeon-Su
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 01.08.2023
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Summary:•Gene editing in A. bisporus generated mixture of the edited and unedited PPO1 sequences.•Disruption of heterokaryosis yielded the PPO1-edited homokaryons.•The unedited PPO1 was eventually edited by Cas9/gRNA produced from neighboring nucleus upon prolonged incubation. PPO1 gene editing in Agaricus bisporus was carried out by CRISPR/Cas9 through Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT). The ATMT to the gill tissue yielded 52 transformants, however, sequencing of which failed to detect any distinct PPO1 modification. Instead, two transformants, N9 and N14, were identified to have mixed sequences at the vicinity of the protospacer adjacent motif (PAM), which was attributed to the presence of multiple nuclei in the mycelial cell. Heterokaryosis of N9 was disrupted to generate 24 homokaryotic and 29 heterokaryotic isolates. PPO1 sequencing of the 53 isolates identified three edited homokaryotic isolates with two single base deletions (L18 and L22) and a four-base deletion (L41) at the 4th base from PAM, and six isolates with mixed sequences. The mixed sequences were resolved to consist of the edited and unedited PPO1s, indicating the presence of both edited and unedited nuclei, thus emphasizing that heterokaryosis is a major obstacle in generating edited nuclei in A. bisporus. Notably, the unedited PPO1s in the homokaryotic L32 and heterokaryotic L49 were discovered to be edited by single base deletion after prolonged incubation, suggesting the transfer of the Cas9-gRNA complex to neighboring nuclei in the common cytoplasm. Lastly, the PPO1-edited heterokaryon Het1, created by mating the edited homokaryotic L18 with the wild-type NH1, exhibited significantly less browning than the wild-type strain, indicating a functional role for PPO1 in the button mushroom browning. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0304-4238
1879-1018
DOI:10.1016/j.scienta.2023.112095