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Light-activated cell identification and sorting (LACIS) for selection of edited clones on a nanofluidic device.

Citation
Mocciaro, A., et al. “Light-Activated Cell Identification And Sorting (Lacis) For Selection Of Edited Clones On A Nanofluidic Device.”. Communications Biology, p. 41.
Author Annamaria Mocciaro, Theodore L Roth, Hayley M Bennett, Magali Soumillon, Abhik Shah, Joseph Hiatt, Kevin Chapman, Alexander Marson, Gregory Lavieu
Abstract

Despite improvements in the CRISPR molecular toolbox, identifying and purifying properly edited clones remains slow, laborious, and low-yield. Here, we establish a method to enable clonal isolation, selection, and expansion of properly edited cells, using OptoElectroPositioning technology for single-cell manipulation on a nanofluidic device. Briefly, after electroporation of primary T cells with -targeting Cas9 ribonucleoproteins, single T cells are isolated on a chip and expanded into colonies. Phenotypic consequences of editing are rapidly assessed on-chip with cell-surface staining for CXCR4. Furthermore, individual colonies are identified based on their specific genotype. Each colony is split and sequentially exported for on-target sequencing and further off-chip clonal expansion of the validated clones. Using this method, single-clone editing efficiencies, including the rate of mono- and bi-allelic indels or precise nucleotide replacements, can be assessed within 10 days from Cas9 ribonucleoprotein introduction in cells.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Communications biology
Volume
1
Number of Pages
41
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
2399-3642
DOI
10.1038/s42003-018-0034-6
Alternate Journal
Commun Biol
PMID
30271925
PMCID
PMC6123811
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