High-efficiency genomic editing in Epstein-Barr virus-transformed lymphoblastoid B cells using a single-stranded donor oligonucleotide strategy.

Johnston, Andrew D, Claudia A Simões-Pires, Masako Suzuki, and John M Greally. 2019. “High-Efficiency Genomic Editing in Epstein-Barr Virus-Transformed Lymphoblastoid B Cells Using a Single-Stranded Donor Oligonucleotide Strategy.”. Communications Biology 2: 312.

Abstract

While human lymphoblastoid cell lines represent a valuable resource for population genetic studies, they have usually been regarded as difficult for CRISPR-mediated genomic editing because of very inefficient DNA transfection and retroviral or lentiviral transduction in these cells, which becomes a substantial problem when multiple constructs need to be co-expressed. Here we describe a protocol using a single-stranded donor oligonucleotide strategy for 'scarless' editing in lymphoblastoid cells, yielding 12/60 (20%) of clones with homology-directed recombination, when rates of <5-10% are frequently typical for many other cell types. The protocol does not require the use of lentiviruses or stable transfection, permitting lymphoblastoid cell lines to be used for CRISPR-mediated genomic targeting and screening in population genetic studies.

Last updated on 11/16/2023
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