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Morula complementation restores male germline in <i>NANOS2</i> null sheep

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posted on 2025-07-10, 03:50 authored by Zachariah McLean, Lisanne Fermin, Sarah ApplebySarah Appleby, Jingwei Wei, Fanli Meng, Paul MacleanPaul Maclean, Benjamin PerryBenjamin Perry, Brigid BrophyBrigid Brophy, Pavla Turner, Blaise Forrester-GauntlettBlaise Forrester-Gauntlett, David Wells, Russell G. Snell, Björn ObackBjörn Oback
<p dir="ltr">Current livestock breeding is slow to respond to rapidly mounting environmental pressures that threaten sustainable animal protein production. New approaches can accelerate genetic improvement by multiplying valuable embryonic, rather than adult genotypes. Chimeras, derived from complementing a sterile host with a fertile donor embryo, provide a pathway to multiply and exclusively transmit elite male germlines. We established genetically sterile hosts and optimized embryo complementation conditions to achieve absolute germline transmission in sheep. The spermatogonia-specific gene <i>NANOS2</i> was disrupted in male (<i>NANOS2</i><sup>+/−</sup>, <i>NANOS2</i><sup>−/−</sup>) and female (<i>NANOS2</i><sup>−/−</sup>) ovine fetal fibroblasts via gRNA–Cas9-mediated homology-directed repair. Targeted cell strains and wild-type controls were used to produce cloned offspring for breeding and phenotyping. Male homozygous knockout clones lacked detectable germ cells, while the somatic compartment of the testis remained intact. By contrast, male monoallelic and female biallelic targeting of <i>NANOS2</i> did not affect germline development, resulting in fertile animals capable of producing fertile offspring with normal reproductive performance. The germ cell niche in <i>NANOS2</i><sup>−/−</sup> hosts was most efficiently complemented by aggregating compacted morulae, rather than earlier cleavage stages, resulting in 97% blastocyst chimerization. Embryo-complemented cloned lambs from two different donor cell lines showed variable chimerism across tissues from each germ layer, including various degrees of germline colonization. A subset of germline chimeras contained normal numbers of prospermatogonia, indicating that the germline was fully restored for absolute transmission of the donor cell genotype.</p>

Funding

Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (C10X1711)

History

Rights statement

© The Author(s) 2025. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of National Academy of Sciences. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Publication date

2025-06-14

Project number

  • Non revenue

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Journal title

PNAS Nexus

ISSN

2752-6542

Volume/issue number

4(7)

Page numbers

pgaf200

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