Viruses (Dec 2021)

Knock-Out of Retrovirus Receptor Gene <i>Tva</i> in the Chicken Confers Resistance to Avian Leukosis Virus Subgroups A and K and Affects Cobalamin (Vitamin B<sub>12</sub>)-Dependent Level of Methylmalonic Acid

  • Anna Koslová,
  • Pavel Trefil,
  • Jitka Mucksová,
  • Veronika Krchlíková,
  • Jiří Plachý,
  • Jakub Krijt,
  • Markéta Reinišová,
  • Dana Kučerová,
  • Josef Geryk,
  • Jiří Kalina,
  • Filip Šenigl,
  • Daniel Elleder,
  • Viktor Kožich,
  • Jiří Hejnar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v13122504
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 12
p. 2504

Abstract

Read online

The chicken Tva cell surface protein, a member of the low-density lipoprotein receptor family, has been identified as an entry receptor for avian leukosis virus of classic subgroup A and newly emerging subgroup K. Because both viruses represent an important concern for the poultry industry, we introduced a frame-shifting deletion into the chicken tva locus with the aim of knocking-out Tva expression and creating a virus-resistant chicken line. The tva knock-out was prepared by CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing in chicken primordial germ cells and orthotopic transplantation of edited cells into the testes of sterilized recipient roosters. The resulting tva −/− chickens tested fully resistant to avian leukosis virus subgroups A and K, both in in vitro and in vivo assays, in contrast to their susceptible tva +/+ and tva +/− siblings. We also found a specific disorder of the cobalamin/vitamin B12 metabolism in the tva knock-out chickens, which is in accordance with the recently recognized physiological function of Tva as a receptor for cobalamin in complex with transcobalamin transporter. Last but not least, we bring a new example of the de novo resistance created by CRISPR/Cas9 editing of pathogen dependence genes in farm animals and, furthermore, a new example of gene editing in chicken.

Keywords