Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gregory D. Davis is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gregory D. Davis.


Science | 2009

Knockout Rats via Embryo Microinjection of Zinc-Finger Nucleases

Aron M. Geurts; Gregory J. Cost; Yevgeniy Freyvert; Bryan Zeitler; Jeffrey C. Miller; Vivian M. Choi; Shirin S. Jenkins; Adam Wood; Xiaoxia Cui; Xiangdong Meng; Anna I Vincent; Stephen Lam; Mieczyslaw Michalkiewicz; Rebecca Schilling; Jamie Foeckler; Shawn Kalloway; Hartmut Weiler; Séverine Ménoret; Ignacio Anegon; Gregory D. Davis; Lei Zhang; Edward J. Rebar; Philip D. Gregory; Fyodor D. Urnov; Howard J. Jacob; Roland Buelow

Targeted gene disruption in rats paves the way for new human disease models. The toolbox of rat genetics currently lacks the ability to introduce site-directed, heritable mutations into the genome to create knockout animals. By using engineered zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) designed to target an integrated reporter and two endogenous rat genes, Immunoglobulin M (IgM) and Rab38, we demonstrate that a single injection of DNA or messenger RNA encoding ZFNs into the one-cell rat embryo leads to a high frequency of animals carrying 25 to 100% disruption at the target locus. These mutations are faithfully and efficiently transmitted through the germline. Our data demonstrate the feasibility of targeted gene disruption in multiple rat strains within 4 months time, paving the way to a humanized monoclonal antibody platform and additional human disease models.


Nature Methods | 2011

High-frequency genome editing using ssDNA oligonucleotides with zinc-finger nucleases

Fuqiang Chen; Shondra M. Pruett-Miller; Yuping Huang; Monika Gjoka; Katarzyna Duda; Jack Taunton; Trevor N. Collingwood; Morten Frödin; Gregory D. Davis

Zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) have enabled highly efficient gene targeting in multiple cell types and organisms. Here we describe methods for using simple ssDNA oligonucleotides in tandem with ZFNs to efficiently produce human cell lines with three distinct genetic outcomes: (i) targeted point mutation, (ii) targeted genomic deletion of up to 100 kb and (iii) targeted insertion of small genetic elements concomitant with large genomic deletions.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

Actin and dynamin2 dynamics and interplay during clathrin-mediated endocytosis.

Alexandre Grassart; Aaron T. Cheng; Sun Hae Hong; Fan Zhang; Nathan Zenzer; Yongmei Feng; David M. Briner; Gregory D. Davis; Dmitry Malkov; David G. Drubin

Actin assembly influences the precise temporal and quantitative recruitment of dynamin2 to sites of clathrin-mediated endocytosis.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

High-efficiency genome editing via 2A-coupled co-expression of fluorescent proteins and zinc finger nucleases or CRISPR/Cas9 nickase pairs

Katarzyna Duda; Lindsey A. Lonowski; Michael Kofoed-Nielsen; Adriana Ibarra; Catherine M. Delay; Qiaohua Kang; Zhang Yang; Shondra M. Pruett-Miller; Eric P. Bennett; Hans H. Wandall; Gregory D. Davis; Steen H. Hansen; Morten Frödin

Targeted endonucleases including zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPRs)/Cas9 are increasingly being used for genome editing in higher species. We therefore devised a broadly applicable and versatile method for increasing editing efficiencies by these tools. Briefly, 2A peptide-coupled co-expression of fluorescent protein and nuclease was combined with fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) to allow for efficient isolation of cell populations with increasingly higher nuclease expression levels, which translated into increasingly higher genome editing rates. For ZFNs, this approach, combined with delivery of donors as single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotides and nucleases as messenger ribonucleic acid, enabled high knockin efficiencies in demanding applications, including biallelic codon conversion frequencies reaching 30–70% at high transfection efficiencies and ∼2% at low transfection efficiencies, simultaneous homozygous knockin mutation of two genes with ∼1.5% efficiency as well as generation of cell pools with almost complete codon conversion via three consecutive targeting and FACS events. Observed off-target effects were minimal, and when occurring, our data suggest that they may be counteracted by selecting intermediate nuclease levels where off-target mutagenesis is low, but on-target mutagenesis remains relatively high. The method was also applicable to the CRISPR/Cas9 system, including CRISPR/Cas9 mutant nickase pairs, which exhibit low off-target mutagenesis compared to wild-type Cas9.


Nature Communications | 2017

Targeted activation of diverse CRISPR-Cas systems for mammalian genome editing via proximal CRISPR targeting

Fuqiang Chen; Xiao Ding; Yongmei Feng; Timothy Seebeck; Yanfang Jiang; Gregory D. Davis

Bacterial CRISPR–Cas systems comprise diverse effector endonucleases with different targeting ranges, specificities and enzymatic properties, but many of them are inactive in mammalian cells and are thus precluded from genome-editing applications. Here we show that the type II-B FnCas9 from Francisella novicida possesses novel properties, but its nuclease function is frequently inhibited at many genomic loci in living human cells. Moreover, we develop a proximal CRISPR (termed proxy-CRISPR) targeting method that restores FnCas9 nuclease activity in a target-specific manner. We further demonstrate that this proxy-CRISPR strategy is applicable to diverse CRISPR–Cas systems, including type II-C Cas9 and type V Cpf1 systems, and can facilitate precise gene editing even between identical genomic sites within the same genome. Our findings provide a novel strategy to enable use of diverse otherwise inactive CRISPR–Cas systems for genome-editing applications and a potential path to modulate the impact of chromatin microenvironments on genome modification.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2015

Donor Plasmid Design for Codon and Single Base Genome Editing Using Zinc Finger Nucleases

Shondra M. Pruett-Miller; Gregory D. Davis

In recent years, CompoZr zinc finger nuclease (ZFN) technology has matured to the point that a user-defined double strand break (DSB) can be placed at virtually any location in the human genome within 50 bp of a desired site. Such high resolution ZFN engineering is well within the conversion tract limitations demarcated by the mammalian DNA repair machinery, resulting in a nearly universal ability to create point mutations throughout the human genome. Additionally, new architectures for targeted nuclease engineering have been rapidly developed, namely transcription activator like effector nucleases (TALENs) and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/Cas systems, further expanding options for placement of DSBs. This new capability has created a need to explore the practical limitations of delivering plasmid-based information to the sites of chromosomal double strand breaks so that nuclease-donor methods can be widely deployed in fundamental and therapeutic research. In this chapter, we explore a ZFN-compatible donor design in the context of codon changes at an endogenous locus encoding the human RSK2 kinase.


Stem Cells and Development | 2013

Derivation and genetic modification of embryonic stem cells from disease-model inbred rat strains.

Sheng Yang; Akiko Takizawa; Jamie Foeckler; Allison Zappa; Monika Gjoka; Rebecca Schilling; Colin Hansen; Haiyan Xu; Shawn Kalloway; Michael Grzybowski; Gregory D. Davis; Howard J. Jacob; Aron M. Geurts

The lack of rat embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and approaches for manipulation of their genomes have restricted the ability to create new genetic models and to explore the function of a single gene in complex diseases in the laboratory rat. The recent breakthrough in isolating germline-competent ESCs from rat and subsequent demonstration of gene knockout has propelled the field forward, but such tools do not yet exist for many disease-model rat strains. Here we derive new ESCs from several commonly used rat models including the Dahl Salt Sensitive (SS), the sequenced Brown Norway (BN), and Fischer (F344) rat and establish the first germline-competent ESCs from a hypertension disease model strain, the Fawn Hooded Hypertensive (FHH) rat. Genetic manipulations including transgenesis mediated by lentivirus, routine homologous recombination, and homologous recombination mediated by zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) were performed effectively in FHH rat ESCs. Our results showed these rat ESC lines, isolated from inner cell masses using mechanical splitting, had germline competency; the Pparg gene locus and homologous genomic region to the mouse Rosa26 locus can be targeted effectively in these rat ESCs. Furthermore, our results also demonstrated that ZFNs increased the efficiency of proper homologous recombination in FHH rat ESCs using targeting vectors with short homology arms. These rat ESC lines and advancements in genetic manipulation pave the way to novel genetic approaches in this valuable biomedical model species and for exploration of complex disease in these strains.


Genome Research | 2010

Functional genomics, proteomics, and regulatory DNA analysis in isogenic settings using zinc finger nuclease-driven transgenesis into a safe harbor locus in the human genome

Russell DeKelver; Vivian M. Choi; Erica A. Moehle; David Paschon; Dirk Hockemeyer; Sebastiaan H. Meijsing; Yasemin Sancak; Xiaoxia Cui; Eveline J. Steine; Jeffrey C. Miller; Phillip Tam; Victor Bartsevich; Xiangdong Meng; Igor Rupniewski; Sunita Gopalan; Helena C. Sun; Kathleen J. Pitz; Jeremy M. Rock; Lei Zhang; Gregory D. Davis; Edward J. Rebar; Iain M. Cheeseman; Keith R. Yamamoto; David M. Sabatini; Rudolf Jaenisch; Philip D. Gregory; Fyodor D. Urnov


Archive | 2013

Crispr-based genome modification and regulation

Fuqiang Chen; Gregory D. Davis; Qiaohua Kang; Scott W. Knight


Archive | 2011

Genome editing using targeting endonucleases and single-stranded nucleic acids

Fuqiang Chen; Shondra M. Pruett-Miller; Gregory D. Davis

Collaboration


Dive into the Gregory D. Davis's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shondra M. Pruett-Miller

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Philip D. Gregory

City of Hope National Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aron M. Geurts

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge