Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Generation of Heritable Prominent Double Muscle Buttock Rabbits via Novel Site Editing of Myostatin Gene Using CRISPR/Cas9 System.
- Journal:
- Frontiers in veterinary science
- Year:
- 2022
- Authors:
- Zheng, Yalin et al.
- Affiliation:
- Guangxi University · China
- Species:
- rabbit
Abstract
Rabbits have been domesticated for meat, wool, and fur production, and have also been cherished as a companion, artistic inspiration, and an experimental model to study many human diseases. In the present study, the muscle mass negative regulator gene myostatin () was knocked out in rabbits at two novel sites in exon3, and the function of these mutations was determined in subsequent generations. The prominent double muscle phenotype with hyperplasia or hypertrophy of muscle fiber was observed in the-KO rabbits, and a similar phenotype was confirmed in the F1 generation. Moreover, the average weight of 80-day-oldKO rabbits (2,452 ± 63 g) was higher than that of wild-type rabbits (2,393.2 ± 106.88 g), and also the bodyweight of-KO rabbits (3,708 ± 43.06g) was significantly higher (< 0.001) at the age of 180 days than wild-type (WT) rabbits (3,224 ± 48.64g). In-KO rabbits, fourteen rabbit pups from the F1 generation and thirteen from the F2 generation stably inherited the inducedgene mutations. Totally, 194 pups were produced in the F1 generation of which 49 were-KO rabbits, while 47 pups were produced in the F2 generation of which 20 were edited rabbits, and the ratio of edited to wild-type rabbits in the F2 generation was approximately 1:1. Thus, we successfully generated a heritable double muscle buttocks rabbits via myostatin mutation with CRISPR/Cas9 system, which could be valuable in rabbit's meat production and also a useful animal model to study the development of muscles among livestock species and improve their important economic traits as well as the human muscle development-related diseases.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35669173/