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Dive into the research topics where Scott C. Fahrenkrug is active.

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Featured researches published by Scott C. Fahrenkrug.


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.


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.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Efficient nonmeiotic allele introgression in livestock using custom endonucleases

Wenfang Tan; Daniel F. Carlson; Cheryl A. Lancto; John R. Garbe; Dennis A. Webster; Perry B. Hackett; Scott C. Fahrenkrug

Significance Selective breeding has long been practiced to enrich for desirable DNA variation that influences livestock traits. We demonstrate that genetic variants can be directly introgressed into livestock genomes using a modified transcription activator-like effector nuclease system. The transient exposure of livestock cells to sequence-targeted editors stimulates homology-directed repair to levels that eliminate the need for transgene-dependent selection. Use of oligonucleotide template enables efficient single nucleotide changes to the genome and permits the transmission of both natural and novel DNA sequence variants into naïve livestock breeds and species. Gene editing offers a powerful method for accelerating the genetic improvement of livestock for food and also for developing swine as a resource for regenerative medicine and models of human disease. We have expanded the livestock gene editing toolbox to include transcription activator-like (TAL) effector nuclease (TALEN)- and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9-stimulated homology-directed repair (HDR) using plasmid, rAAV, and oligonucleotide templates. Toward the genetic dehorning of dairy cattle, we introgressed a bovine POLLED allele into horned bull fibroblasts. Single nucleotide alterations or small indels were introduced into 14 additional genes in pig, goat, and cattle fibroblasts using TALEN mRNA and oligonucleotide transfection with efficiencies of 10–50% in populations. Several of the chosen edits mimic naturally occurring performance-enhancing or disease- resistance alleles, including alteration of single base pairs. Up to 70% of the fibroblast colonies propagated without selection harbored the intended edits, of which more than one-half were homozygous. Edited fibroblasts were used to generate pigs with knockout alleles in the DAZL and APC genes to model infertility and colon cancer. Our methods enable unprecedented meiosis-free intraspecific and interspecific introgression of select alleles in livestock for agricultural and biomedical applications.


BioMed Research International | 2010

Development and application of bovine and porcine oligonucleotide arrays with protein-based annotation.

John R. Garbe; Christine G. Elsik; Eric Antoniou; James M. Reecy; Karl J. Clark; Anand Venkatraman; JaeWoo Kim; Robert D. Schnabel; C. Michael Dickens; Russell D. Wolfinger; Scott C. Fahrenkrug; Jeremy F. Taylor

The design of oligonucleotide sequences for the detection of gene expression in species with disparate volumes of genome and EST sequence information has been broadly studied. However, a congruous strategy has yet to emerge to allow the design of sensitive and specific gene expression detection probes. This study explores the use of a phylogenomic approach to align transcribed sequences to vertebrate protein sequences for the detection of gene families to design genomewide 70-mer oligonucleotide probe sequences for bovine and porcine. The bovine array contains 23,580 probes that target the transcripts of 16,341 genes, about 72% of the total number of bovine genes. The porcine array contains 19,980 probes targeting 15,204 genes, about 76% of the genes in the Ensembl annotation of the pig genome. An initial experiment using the bovine array demonstrates the specificity and sensitivity of the array.


Transgenic Research | 2015

Genome edited sheep and cattle.

Chris Proudfoot; Daniel F. Carlson; Rachel Huddart; Charles R. Long; J. H. Pryor; Tim King; Simon G. Lillico; Alan Mileham; David G. McLaren; C. Bruce A. Whitelaw; Scott C. Fahrenkrug

Genome editing tools enable efficient and accurate genome manipulation. An enhanced ability to modify the genomes of livestock species could be utilized to improve disease resistance, productivity or breeding capability as well as the generation of new biomedical models. To date, with respect to the direct injection of genome editor mRNA into livestock zygotes, this technology has been limited to the generation of pigs with edited genomes. To capture the far-reaching applications of gene-editing, from disease modelling to agricultural improvement, the technology must be easily applied to a number of species using a variety of approaches. In this study, we demonstrate zygote injection of TALEN mRNA can also produce gene-edited cattle and sheep. In both species we have targeted the myostatin (MSTN) gene. In addition, we report a critical innovation for application of gene-editing to the cattle industry whereby gene-edited calves can be produced with specified genetics by ovum pickup, in vitro fertilization and zygote microinjection (OPU-IVF-ZM). This provides a practical alternative to somatic cell nuclear transfer for gene knockout or introgression of desirable alleles into a target breed/genetic line.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Live pigs produced from genome edited zygotes

Simon G. Lillico; Chris Proudfoot; Daniel F. Carlson; Dana Stverakova; Claire Neil; Carol Blain; Tim King; William A. Ritchie; Wenfang Tan; Alan Mileham; David G. McLaren; Scott C. Fahrenkrug; C. Bruce A. Whitelaw

Transcription activator-like effector nuclease (TALEN) and zinc finger nuclease (ZFN) genome editing technology enables site directed engineering of the genome. Here we demonstrate for the first time that both TALEN and ZFN injected directly into pig zygotes can produce live genome edited pigs. Monoallelic as well as heterozygous and homozygous biallelic events were identified, significantly broadening the use of genome editor technology in livestock by enabling gene knockout in zygotes from any chosen mating.


Advances in Genetics | 2012

Precision Editing of Large Animal Genomes

Wenfang Spring Tan; Daniel F. Carlson; Mark Walton; Scott C. Fahrenkrug; Perry B. Hackett

Transgenic animals are an important source of protein and nutrition for most humans and will play key roles in satisfying the increasing demand for food in an ever-increasing world population. The past decade has experienced a revolution in the development of methods that permit the introduction of specific alterations to complex genomes. This precision will enhance genome-based improvement of farm animals for food production. Precision genetics also will enhance the development of therapeutic biomaterials and models of human disease as resources for the development of advanced patient therapies.


Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2012

Targeting DNA With Fingers and TALENs

Daniel F. Carlson; Scott C. Fahrenkrug; Perry B. Hackett

Researchers have long recognized that the random introduction of new DNA into the genome could result in unpredictable genetic effects due to bilateral influences between transgenic and endogenous sequences. Hence, precise editing or replacement of mutant genes has been a major goal of gene therapy since its inception. That goal looked possible with the publication of studies demonstrating that targeted cleavage of chromosomal sequences and enhanced homologous recombination (HR) could be achieved using chimeric molecules composed of a nuclease domain and separate, designer DNA-recognition domains.1,2 Zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) are artificial endonucleases that consist of a FokI cleavage domain tethered to engineered Cys2His2 zinc-finger, DNA-binding polypeptides.3,4,5 ZFNs have gained considerable momentum and are widely considered the most mature nuclease technology in the gene therapy field.6 However, after 15 years in the spotlight, a new chimeric nuclease has emerged, Transcription Activator-Like (TAL) Effector Nucleases (TALENs).7,8,9,10 Here, we describe functional and design characteristics of ZFNs and TALENs and discuss their expanding role as tools for research and gene therapy.


PLOS ONE | 2007

The restriction of zoonotic PERV transmission by human APOBEC3G.

Stefán R. Jónsson; Rebecca S. LaRue; Mark D. Stenglein; Scott C. Fahrenkrug; Valgerdur Andrésdóttir; Reuben S. Harris

The human APOBEC3G protein is an innate anti-viral factor that can dominantly inhibit the replication of some endogenous and exogenous retroviruses. The prospects of purposefully harnessing such an anti-viral defense are under investigation. Here, long-term co-culture experiments were used to show that porcine endogenous retrovirus (PERV) transmission from pig to human cells is reduced to nearly undetectable levels by expressing human APOBEC3G in virus-producing pig kidney cells. Inhibition occurred by a deamination-independent mechanism, likely after particle production but before the virus could immortalize by integration into human genomic DNA. PERV inhibition did not require the DNA cytosine deaminase activity of APOBEC3G and, correspondingly, APOBEC3G-attributable hypermutations were not detected. In contrast, over-expression of the sole endogenous APOBEC3 protein of pigs failed to interfere significantly with PERV transmission. Together, these data constitute the first proof-of-principle demonstration that APOBEC3 proteins can be used to fortify the innate anti-viral defenses of cells to prevent the zoonotic transmission of an endogenous retrovirus. These studies suggest that human APOBEC3G-transgenic pigs will provide safer, PERV-less xenotransplantation resources and that analogous cross-species APOBEC3-dependent restriction strategies may be useful for thwarting other endogenous as well as exogenous retrovirus infections.


BMC Biotechnology | 2007

Enzymatic engineering of the porcine genome with transposons and recombinases

Karl J. Clark; Daniel F. Carlson; Linda K. Foster; Byung Whi Kong; Douglas N. Foster; Scott C. Fahrenkrug

BackgroundSwine is an important agricultural commodity and biomedical model. Manipulation of the pig genome provides opportunity to improve production efficiency, enhance disease resistance, and add value to swine products. Genetic engineering can also expand the utility of pigs for modeling human disease, developing clinical treatment methodologies, or donating tissues for xenotransplantation. Realizing the full potential of pig genetic engineering requires translation of the complete repertoire of genetic tools currently employed in smaller model organisms to practical use in pigs.ResultsApplication of transposon and recombinase technologies for manipulation of the swine genome requires characterization of their activity in pig cells. We tested four transposon systems- Sleeping Beauty, Tol2, piggyBac, and Passport in cultured porcine cells. Transposons increased the efficiency of DNA integration up to 28-fold above background and provided for precise delivery of 1 to 15 transgenes per cell. Both Cre and Flp recombinase were functional in pig cells as measured by their ability to remove a positive-negative selection cassette from 16 independent clones and over 20 independent genomic locations. We also demonstrated a Cre-dependent genetic switch capable of eliminating an intervening positive-negative selection cassette and activating GFP expression from episomal and genome-resident transposons.ConclusionWe have demonstrated for the first time that transposons and recombinases are capable of mobilizing DNA into and out of the porcine genome in a precise and efficient manner. This study provides the basis for developing transposon and recombinase based tools for genetic engineering of the swine genome.

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Wenfang Tan

University of Minnesota

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Aron M. Geurts

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Tad S. Sonstegard

Agricultural Research Service

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