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Poor Splice-Site Recognition in a Humanized Zebrafish Knockin Model for the Recurrent Deep-Intronic c.7595-2144A > G Mutation in USH2A

Authors :
Ralph Slijkerman
Theo A. Peters
Milou Gerits
Sanne Broekman
Erik de Vrieze
Erwin van Wijk
Hannie Kremer
Lisette Hetterschijt
Alexander Goloborodko
Source :
Zebrafish, 15, 6, pp. 597-609, Zebrafish, 15, 597-609
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The frequent deep-intronic c.7595-2144AG mutation in intron 40 of USH2A generates a high-quality splice donor site, resulting in the incorporation of a pseudoexon (PE40) into the mature transcript that is predicted to prematurely terminate usherin translation. Aberrant USH2A pre-mRNA splicing could be corrected in patient-derived fibroblasts using antisense oligonucleotides. With the aim to study the effect of the c.7595-2144AG mutation and USH2A splice redirection on retinal function, a humanized zebrafish knockin model was generated, in which 670 basepairs of ush2a intron 40 were exchanged for 557 basepairs of the corresponding human sequence using an optimized CRISPR/Cas9-based protocol. However, in the retina of adult homozygous humanized zebrafish, only 7.4% ± 3.9% of ush2a transcripts contained the human PE40 sequence and immunohistochemical analyses revealed no differences in the usherin expression and localization between the retina of humanized and wild-type zebrafish larvae. Nevertheless, we were able to partially correct aberrant ush2a splicing using a PE40-targeting antisense morpholino. Our results indicate a clear difference in splice-site recognition by the human and zebrafish splicing machinery. Therefore, we propose a protocol in which the effect of human splice-modulating mutations is studied in a zebrafish-specific cell-based splice assay before the generation of a humanized zebrafish knockin model.

Details

ISSN :
15458547
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Zebrafish
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee16f2116e53d49a1935a1955965ccbb