Morpholino Oligomers pp 87-104

Part of the Methods in Molecular Biology book series (MIMB, volume 1565)

Using Morpholinos to Probe Gene Networks in Sea Urchin

Protocol

Abstract

The control processes that underlie the progression of development can be summarized in maps of gene regulatory networks (GRNs). A critical step in their assembly is the systematic perturbation of network candidates. In sea urchins the most important method for interfering with expression in a gene-specific way is application of morpholino antisense oligonucleotides (MOs). MOs act by binding to their sequence complement in transcripts resulting in a block in translation or a change in splicing and thus result in a loss of function. Despite the tremendous success of this technology, recent comparisons to mutants generated by genome editing have led to renewed criticism and challenged its reliability. As with all methods based on sequence recognition, MOs are prone to off-target binding that may result in phenotypes that are erroneously ascribed to the loss of the intended target. However, the slow progression of development in sea urchins has enabled extremely detailed studies of gene activity in the embryo. This wealth of knowledge paired with the simplicity of the sea urchin embryo enables careful analysis of MO phenotypes through a variety of methods that do not rely on terminal phenotypes. This article summarizes the use of MOs in probing GRNs and the steps that should be taken to assure their specificity.

Key words

Morpholino Specificity Sea urchin Perturbation Gene regulatory network Knockdown Mutant Morphant CRISPR 

Copyright information

© Springer Science+Business Media LLC 2017

Authors and Affiliations

  1. 1.School of Natural SciencesUniversity of California MercedMercedUSA

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