Powerful Gene Editing Approach Boosts Rotifers in Pantheon of Laboratory Animals

Brachionus rotifer. Courtesy: Kristin Gribble

Media Contact: Diana Kenney, Marine Biological Laboratory
dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-685-3525

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Much about tiny, swimming rotifers makes them ideal study subjects. Although barely visible to the naked eye, these transparent animals and their innards are readily viewed under a microscope. Whatā€™s more, they grow readily in laboratory culture, offering scientists an otherwise difficult-to-obtain perspective from their corner of the animal kingdom.

However, while rotifers have been used experimentally for more than a century by many research groups, scientists have so far lacked the ability to readily manipulate rotifersā€™ genetics, placing a hard limit on the experiments they can run with these animals.Ģż

A joint effort by Kristin Gribble and David Mark Welch at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) has overcome this challenge by devising a method for precisely altering the rotifersā€™ genomes using the gene editing system CRISPR-Cas9. In experiments described in their team edited two genes and added a genetic sequence to produce changes that the rotifers passed down through generations.Ģż

ā€œOur method turns out to be a very practical way to generate a large number of genetically altered rotifers fairly quickly,ā€ said Mark Welch, a senior scientist at MBL and director of the Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution.

Not only will this advance benefit his lab and Gribbleā€™s, which use rotifers to study the biology of aging, DNA repair mechanisms, and other fundamental questions, it will ā€œopen the field to allow more people to work with these animals,ā€ Mark Welch said.

Developing a microscopic, water-dwelling lab animal

A female Brachionus manjavacas rotifer magnified under a microscope. Credit: Michael Shribak and Kristin Gribble.
A female Brachionus manjavacas rotifer, as magnified under a microscope. This rotifer is 350 Āµm long; about the size of a grain of sand. The hair-like cilia at the top of the individual are used for swimming and feeding. By injecting the CRISPR system components into the femaleā€™s large reproductive system, the targeted genes should be edited in the four developing eggs she is carrying at her posterior end. These eggs will hatch within a day, and the offspring will carry the edited genes. The image was taken with the polychromatic polarizing microscope, giving the normally transparent animal a colorful appearance. Photo credit: Michael Shribak and Kristin Gribble

Certain living things ā€” the bacterium E. coli, fruit flies, and mice, for example ā€” have become well established as model organisms that scientists routinely use in research. Taken together, however, they donā€™t adequately represent the full diversity of life.

The MBL team aims to add rotifers to this group of genetically tractableĢż organisms because, as tiny invertebrates with close ties to the ancestors of modern animals, they offer an important perspective on evolution, development, and other aspects of biology.Ģż

To develop rotifers as model organisms, researchers need the capacity to tweak these animalsā€™ genomes. In 2017, MBL Interim Director of University of Chicago provided Gribble and Mark Welch with funding to devise a method for doing so using CRISPR-Cas9. The goal of cultivating a greater variety ofĢż model organisms later became formalized as MBLā€™s New Research Organisms initiative.

Now widely employed in research, CRISPR-Cas9 makes precise cuts within DNA, which researchers use to shut down or alter genes. First, however, they must get the CRISPR system into the animals.Ģż

Fine-sawdust-sized specks darting about in water, rotifers make for unusually challenging targets. After many unsuccessful attempts to hold them still, first author Haiyang Feng, then a postdoctoral scientist at MBL, devised a solution: By immersing them in a high-viscosity solution and administering a low level of an anesthetic, he slowed the animals enough to grab them one at a time with light suction through a hollow needle.Ģż

With the animal, always a female, in place, he injected the gene editing system into the part of its body that supplies nutrients to the eggs. The offspring that hatched from these eggs then carried the mutations, which they passed on to their offspring.Ģż

In this way, the team inactivated vasa, a gene crucial to animal development, causing the rotifers to stop reproducing after a few generations. By turning off a second gene, mlh3, they prevented the rotifers from producing male offspring. And, finally, by adding a section of genetic code containing ā€œstopā€ instructions into mlh3, they achieved the same effect.

Postdoctoral scientist Hiayang Feng at the MBLā€™s gene editing facility.
Postdoctoral scientist Hiayang Feng at the MBLā€™s gene editing facility. Dr. Feng developed a method to inject rotifers with CRISPR components that was critical to the success of the project. Credit: David Mark Welch

New possibilities for rotifer research

Both researchers intend to use the CRISPR-based method to genetically alter rotifers for their own research. As part of her work exploring how mothersā€™ age can affect the traits of their offspring, Gribble, an associate scientist at MBL, is investigating the role of mitochondria, the energy-producing component of cells. The new approach will allow her to tag or alter mitochondria. Mark Welch, meanwhile, plans to use it to explore the molecular mechanisms behind one rotifer speciesā€™ ability to revive after completely drying out, including how they repair damage to their DNA.

Studies like these are only the beginning. ā€œThis new tool, along with the ease of raising rotifers in the lab, will make it possible to use them to answer lots of questions we arenā€™t even thinking about yet,ā€ Gribble says.

Citation: Feng H., Bavister G., Gribble K.E., Mark Welch D.B. (2023) Highly efficient CRISPR-mediated gene editing in a rotifer. PLoS Biol. 21(7): e3001888.

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91Ā鶹ĢģĆĄ (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery ā€“ exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the .

Media Contact

Media Contact: Diana Kenney, Marine Biological Laboratory
dkenney@mbl.edu; 508-685-3525