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Dive into the research topics where Daniel F. Voytas is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel F. Voytas.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2011

Efficient design and assembly of custom TALEN and other TAL effector-based constructs for DNA targeting

Tomas Cermak; Erin L. Doyle; Michelle Christian; Li-Li Wang; Yong Zhang; Clarice L. Schmidt; Joshua A. Baller; Nikunj V. Somia; Adam J. Bogdanove; Daniel F. Voytas

TALENs are important new tools for genome engineering. Fusions of transcription activator-like (TAL) effectors of plant pathogenic Xanthomonas spp. to the FokI nuclease, TALENs bind and cleave DNA in pairs. Binding specificity is determined by customizable arrays of polymorphic amino acid repeats in the TAL effectors. We present a method and reagents for efficiently assembling TALEN constructs with custom repeat arrays. We also describe design guidelines based on naturally occurring TAL effectors and their binding sites. Using software that applies these guidelines, in nine genes from plants, animals and protists, we found candidate cleavage sites on average every 35 bp. Each of 15 sites selected from this set was cleaved in a yeast-based assay with TALEN pairs constructed with our reagents. We used two of the TALEN pairs to mutate HPRT1 in human cells and ADH1 in Arabidopsis thaliana protoplasts. Our reagents include a plasmid construct for making custom TAL effectors and one for TAL effector fusions to additional proteins of interest. Using the former, we constructed de novo a functional analog of AvrHah1 of Xanthomonas gardneri. The complete plasmid set is available through the non-profit repository AddGene and a web-based version of our software is freely accessible online.


Genetics | 2010

Targeting DNA Double-Strand Breaks with TAL Effector Nucleases

Michelle Christian; Tomas Cermak; Erin L. Doyle; Clarice L. Schmidt; Feng Zhang; Aaron W. Hummel; Adam J. Bogdanove; Daniel F. Voytas

Engineered nucleases that cleave specific DNA sequences in vivo are valuable reagents for targeted mutagenesis. Here we report a new class of sequence-specific nucleases created by fusing transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs) to the catalytic domain of the FokI endonuclease. Both native and custom TALE-nuclease fusions direct DNA double-strand breaks to specific, targeted sites.


Nature | 2012

In vivo genome editing using a high-efficiency TALEN system

Victoria M. Bedell; Ying Wang; Jarryd M. Campbell; Tanya L. Poshusta; Colby G. Starker; Randall G. Krug; Wenfang Tan; Sumedha G. Penheiter; Alvin C.H. Ma; Anskar Y. H. Leung; Scott C. Fahrenkrug; Daniel F. Carlson; Daniel F. Voytas; Karl J. Clark; Jeffrey J. Essner; Stephen C. Ekker

The zebrafish (Danio rerio) is increasingly being used to study basic vertebrate biology and human disease with a rich array of in vivo genetic and molecular tools. However, the inability to readily modify the genome in a targeted fashion has been a bottleneck in the field. Here we show that improvements in artificial transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) provide a powerful new approach for targeted zebrafish genome editing and functional genomic applications. Using the GoldyTALEN modified scaffold and zebrafish delivery system, we show that this enhanced TALEN toolkit has a high efficiency in inducing locus-specific DNA breaks in somatic and germline tissues. At some loci, this efficacy approaches 100%, including biallelic conversion in somatic tissues that mimics phenotypes seen using morpholino-based targeted gene knockdowns. With this updated TALEN system, we successfully used single-stranded DNA oligonucleotides to precisely modify sequences at predefined locations in the zebrafish genome through homology-directed repair, including the introduction of a custom-designed EcoRV site and a modified loxP (mloxP) sequence into somatic tissue in vivo. We further show successful germline transmission of both EcoRV and mloxP engineered chromosomes. This combined approach offers the potential to model genetic variation as well as to generate targeted conditional alleles.


Science | 2011

TAL Effectors: Customizable Proteins for DNA Targeting

Adam J. Bogdanove; Daniel F. Voytas

Generating and applying new knowledge from the wealth of available genomic information is hindered, in part, by the difficulty of altering nucleotide sequences and expression of genes in living cells in a targeted fashion. Progress has been made in engineering DNA binding domains to direct proteins to particular sequences for mutagenesis or manipulation of transcription; however, achieving the requisite specificities has been challenging. Transcription activator–like (TAL) effectors of plant pathogenic bacteria contain a modular DNA binding domain that appears to overcome this challenge. Comprising tandem, polymorphic amino acid repeats that individually specify contiguous nucleotides in DNA, this domain is being deployed in DNA targeting for applications ranging from understanding gene function in model organisms to improving traits in crop plants to treating genetic disorders in people.


Nature | 2009

High frequency modification of plant genes using engineered zinc finger nucleases

Jeffrey A. Townsend; David A. Wright; Ronnie J. Winfrey; Fengli Fu; Morgan L. Maeder; J. Keith Joung; Daniel F. Voytas

An efficient method for making directed DNA sequence modifications to plant genes (gene targeting) is at present lacking, thereby frustrating efforts to dissect plant gene function and engineer crop plants that better meet the world’s burgeoning need for food, fibre and fuel. Zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs)—enzymes engineered to create DNA double-strand breaks at specific loci—are potent stimulators of gene targeting; for example, they can be used to precisely modify engineered reporter genes in plants. Here we demonstrate high-frequency ZFN-stimulated gene targeting at endogenous plant genes, namely the tobacco acetolactate synthase genes (ALS SuRA and SuRB), for which specific mutations are known to confer resistance to imidazolinone and sulphonylurea herbicides. Herbicide-resistance mutations were introduced into SuR loci by ZFN-mediated gene targeting at frequencies exceeding 2% of transformed cells for mutations as far as 1.3 kilobases from the ZFN cleavage site. More than 40% of recombinant plants had modifications in multiple SuR alleles. The observed high frequency of gene targeting indicates that it is now possible to efficiently make targeted sequence changes in endogenous plant genes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Efficient TALEN-mediated gene knockout in livestock

Daniel F. Carlson; Wenfang Tan; Simon G. Lillico; Dana Stverakova; Chris Proudfoot; Michelle Christian; Daniel F. Voytas; Charles R. Long; C. Bruce A. Whitelaw; Scott C. Fahrenkrug

Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) are programmable nucleases that join FokI endonuclease with the modular DNA-binding domain of TALEs. Although zinc-finger nucleases enable a variety of genome modifications, their application to genetic engineering of livestock has been slowed by technical limitations of embryo-injection, culture of primary cells, and difficulty in producing reliable reagents with a limited budget. In contrast, we found that TALENs could easily be manufactured and that over half (23/36, 64%) demonstrate high activity in primary cells. Cytoplasmic injections of TALEN mRNAs into livestock zygotes were capable of inducing gene KO in up to 75% of embryos analyzed, a portion of which harbored biallelic modification. We also developed a simple transposon coselection strategy for TALEN-mediated gene modification in primary fibroblasts that enabled both enrichment for modified cells and efficient isolation of modified colonies. Coselection after treatment with a single TALEN-pair enabled isolation of colonies with mono- and biallelic modification in up to 54% and 17% of colonies, respectively. Coselection after treatment with two TALEN-pairs directed against the same chromosome enabled the isolation of colonies harboring large chromosomal deletions and inversions (10% and 4% of colonies, respectively). TALEN-modified Ossabaw swine fetal fibroblasts were effective nuclear donors for cloning, resulting in the creation of miniature swine containing mono- and biallelic mutations of the LDL receptor gene as models of familial hypercholesterolemia. TALENs thus appear to represent a highly facile platform for the modification of livestock genomes for both biomedical and agricultural applications.


Nature Methods | 2011

Selection-free zinc-finger-nuclease engineering by context-dependent assembly (CoDA)

Jeffry D. Sander; Elizabeth J. Dahlborg; Mathew J. Goodwin; Lindsay Cade; Feng Zhang; Daniel Cifuentes; Shaun J. Curtin; Jessica S. Blackburn; Stacey Thibodeau-Beganny; Yiping Qi; Christopher J. Pierick; Ellen J. Hoffman; Morgan L. Maeder; Cyd Khayter; Deepak Reyon; Drena Dobbs; David M. Langenau; Robert M. Stupar; Antonio J. Giraldez; Daniel F. Voytas; Randall T. Peterson; Jing-Ruey J. Yeh; J. Keith Joung

Engineered zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) enable targeted genome modification. Here we describe context-dependent assembly (CoDA), a platform for engineering ZFNs using only standard cloning techniques or custom DNA synthesis. Using CoDA-generated ZFNs, we rapidly altered 20 genes in Danio rerio, Arabidopsis thaliana and Glycine max. The simplicity and efficacy of CoDA will enable broad adoption of ZFN technology and make possible large-scale projects focused on multigene pathways or genome-wide alterations.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

TAL Effector-Nucleotide Targeter (TALE-NT) 2.0: tools for TAL effector design and target prediction

Erin L. Doyle; Nicholas J. Booher; Daniel Standage; Daniel F. Voytas; Volker Brendel; John K. VanDyk; Adam J. Bogdanove

Transcription activator-like (TAL) effectors are repeat-containing proteins used by plant pathogenic bacteria to manipulate host gene expression. Repeats are polymorphic and individually specify single nucleotides in the DNA target, with some degeneracy. A TAL effector-nucleotide binding code that links repeat type to specified nucleotide enables prediction of genomic binding sites for TAL effectors and customization of TAL effectors for use in DNA targeting, in particular as custom transcription factors for engineered gene regulation and as site-specific nucleases for genome editing. We have developed a suite of web-based tools called TAL Effector-Nucleotide Targeter 2.0 (TALE-NT 2.0; https://boglab.plp.iastate.edu/) that enables design of custom TAL effector repeat arrays for desired targets and prediction of TAL effector binding sites, ranked by likelihood, in a genome, promoterome or other sequence of interest. Search parameters can be set by the user to work with any TAL effector or TAL effector nuclease architecture. Applications range from designing highly specific DNA targeting tools and identifying potential off-target sites to predicting effector targets important in plant disease.


Nature Methods | 2008

Unexpected failure rates for modular assembly of engineered zinc fingers

Cherie L. Ramirez; Jonathan E. Foley; David A. Wright; Felix Müller-Lerch; Shamim H. Rahman; Tatjana I. Cornu; Ronnie J. Winfrey; Jeffry D. Sander; Fengli Fu; Jeffrey A. Townsend; Toni Cathomen; Daniel F. Voytas; J. Keith Joung

Nat. Methods 5, 374–375 (2008); corrected after print 29 May 2008. In the version of this correspondence initially published, the two previously published datasets analyzed were labeled with incorrect references in Figure 1b. Reference 2 should be associated with the second column (80 sites), and reference 3 should be associated with the third column (96 sites).


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Simple Methods for Generating and Detecting Locus-Specific Mutations Induced with TALENs in the Zebrafish Genome

Timothy J. Dahlem; Kazuyuki Hoshijima; Michael J. Jurynec; Derrick Gunther; Colby G. Starker; Alexandra S. Locke; Allison M. Weis; Daniel F. Voytas; David Grunwald

The zebrafish is a powerful experimental system for uncovering gene function in vertebrate organisms. Nevertheless, studies in the zebrafish have been limited by the approaches available for eliminating gene function. Here we present simple and efficient methods for inducing, detecting, and recovering mutations at virtually any locus in the zebrafish. Briefly, double-strand DNA breaks are induced at a locus of interest by synthetic nucleases, called TALENs. Subsequent host repair of the DNA lesions leads to the generation of insertion and deletion mutations at the targeted locus. To detect the induced DNA sequence alterations at targeted loci, genomes are examined using High Resolution Melt Analysis, an efficient and sensitive method for detecting the presence of newly arising sequence polymorphisms. As the DNA binding specificity of a TALEN is determined by a custom designed array of DNA recognition modules, each of which interacts with a single target nucleotide, TALENs with very high target sequence specificities can be easily generated. Using freely accessible reagents and Web-based software, and a very simple cloning strategy, a TALEN that uniquely recognizes a specific pre-determined locus in the zebrafish genome can be generated within days. Here we develop and test the activity of four TALENs directed at different target genes. Using the experimental approach described here, every embryo injected with RNA encoding a TALEN will acquire targeted mutations. Multiple independently arising mutations are produced in each growing embryo, and up to 50% of the host genomes may acquire a targeted mutation. Upon reaching adulthood, approximately 90% of these animals transmit targeted mutations to their progeny. Results presented here indicate the TALENs are highly sequence-specific and produce minimal off-target effects. In all, it takes about two weeks to create a target-specific TALEN and generate growing embryos that harbor an array of germ line mutations at a pre-specified locus.

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Feng Zhang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tomas Cermak

University of Minnesota

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Yong Zhang

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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