Fibroin heavy chain gene replacement with a highly ordered synthetic repeat sequence in Bombyx mori

Insect Biochem Mol Biol. 2023 Oct:161:104002. doi: 10.1016/j.ibmb.2023.104002. Epub 2023 Aug 30.

Abstract

The exceptional quality of silkworm silk is attributed to the amino acid sequence of its fibroin heavy chain (Fib-H) protein. The large central domain of Fib-H, which consists of glycine- and alanine-rich crystalline regions interspersed with amorphous motifs of approximately 30 amino acid residues, is considered crucial for fibrilization and determines the properties of the silk fiber. We established a technical platform to modify the Fib-H core region systematically using transcription activator-like effector nuclease-mediated homologous recombination through a somatic and germline gene knockin assay along with PCR-based screening. This efficient knockin system was used to generate a silkworm strain carrying a mutant Fib-H allele, in which the core region was replaced with a highly ordered synthetic repeat sequence of a length comparable with native Fib-H core. Heterozygous knockin mutants produced seemingly normal cocoons, whereas homozygotes did not and exhibited considerable degradation in their posterior silk glands (PSGs). Cross-sectional examination of the PSG lumen and tensile tests conducted on reeled silk threads indicated that the mutant Fib-H, which exhibited reduced stability in the PSG cells and lumen, affected the mechanical properties of the fiber. Thus, sequence manipulation of the Fib-H core domain was identified as a crucial step in successfully creating artificial silk using knockin technology.

Keywords: Fibroin heavy chain gene; Gene knockin; Homologous recombination; TALEN; silkworm.