The development of designed site-specific endonucleases boosted the establishment of gene targeting (GT) techniques in a row of different species. However, the methods described in plants require a highly efficient transformation and regeneration procedure and, therefore, can be applied to very few species. Here, we describe a highly efficient GT system that is suitable for all transformable plants regardless of transformation efficiency. Efficient in planta GT was achieved in Arabidopsis thaliana by expression of a sitespecific endonuclease that not only cuts within the target but also the chromosomal transgenic donor, leading to an excised targeting vector. Progeny clonal for the targeted allele could be obtained directly by harvesting seeds. Targeted events could be identified up to approximately once per 100 seeds depending on the target donor combination. Molecular analysis demonstrated that, in almost all events, homologous recombination occurred at both ends of the break. No ectopic integration of the GT vector was found.plant biotechnology | plant breeding | gene technology | double-strand-break repair S ince the first report on gene targeting (GT) in plants was published (1), various approaches were tested to improve the efficiency of the method (2-5), which has been summarized in recent reviews (6, 7). We were able to demonstrate that the integration of a transfer DNA (T-DNA) by homologous recombination (HR) into a specific locus could be enhanced by two orders of magnitude via double-strand-break (DSB) induction using a site-specific endonuclease (8). More recently, by the use of zinc finger nucleases (9), which, in principle, can be used to induce a DSB at any genomic site, endogenous loci have been targeted in Arabidopsis (10), tobacco (11), and maize (12) at high frequencies (13). Some time ago, a method for in vivo targeting was developed in Drosophila. A stably integrated donor precursor molecule is first circularized by the FLP recombinase and subsequently linearized via cutting a single I-SceI recognition site, generating the actual GT vector (14). However, such a technique has not been successfully transferred to plants. We have previously shown that DNA can be efficiently excised from the genome in planta by the use of a site-specific endonuclease (15). To test whether the combination of this approach with DSB-induced recombination might lead to an efficient GT system, that is independent of transformation, we performed a proof-of-concept (POC) experiment in Arabidopsis using I-SceI (16) as a sitespecific nuclease.
ResultsGenerating Homozygous Single-Copy GT Lines. Our in planta GT system is based on three different constructs (two shown in Fig. 1A) that were transformed independently by floral dipping. The target locus contains a truncated β-glucuronidase (GUS) gene (uidA) that can be restored via GT. DSB induction at the two ISceI recognition sites flanking a kanamycin-resistance gene would result in excision of the kanamycin-resistance gene and in activation of the target locus for HR. Th...