Endogenous C-terminal Tagging by CRISPR/Cas9 in Trypanosoma cruzi

Bio Protoc. 2017 May 20;7(10):e2299. doi: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2299.

Abstract

To achieve the C-terminal tagging of endogenous proteins in T. cruzi we use the Cas9/pTREX-n vector (Lander et al., 2015) to insert a specific tag sequence (3xHA or 3xc-Myc) at the 3' end of a specific gene of interest (GOI). Chimeric sgRNA targeting the 3' end of the GOI is PCR-amplified and cloned into Cas9/pTREX-n vector. Then a DNA donor molecule to induce DNA repair by homologous recombination is amplified. This donor sequence contains the tag sequence and a marker for antibiotic resistance, plus 100 bp homology arms corresponding to regions located right upstream of the stop codon and downstream of the Cas9 target site at the GOI locus. Vectors pMOTag23M (Oberholzer et al., 2006) or pMOHX1Tag4H (Lander et al., 2016b) are used as PCR templates for DNA donor amplification. Epimastigotes co-transfected with the sgRNA/Cas9/pTREX-n construct and the DNA donor cassette are then cultured for 5 weeks with antibiotics for selection of double resistant parasites. Endogenous gene tagging is finally verified by PCR and Western blot analysis.

Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; Endogenous tagging; Genome editing; Subcellular localization; Trypanosoma cruzi.