High-Fidelity Cytosine Base Editing in a GC-Rich Corynebacterium glutamicum with Reduced DNA Off-Target Editing Effects
Genome editing technology is a powerful tool for programming microbial cell factories. However, rat APOBEC1-derived cytosine base editor (CBE) that converts C•G to T•A at target genes induced DNA off-targets, regardless of single-guide RNA (sgRNA) sequences. Although the high efficiencies of the bac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Microbiology spectrum 2022-12, Vol.10 (6), p.e0376022-e0376022 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Genome editing technology is a powerful tool for programming microbial cell factories. However, rat APOBEC1-derived cytosine base editor (CBE) that converts C•G to T•A at target genes induced DNA off-targets, regardless of single-guide RNA (sgRNA) sequences. Although the high efficiencies of the bacterial CBEs have been developed, a risk of unidentified off-targets impeded genome editing for microbial cell factories. To address the issues, we demonstrate the genome engineering of Corynebacterium glutamicum as a GC-rich model industrial bacterium by generating premature termination codons (PTCs) in desired genes using high-fidelity cytosine base editors (CBEs). Through this CBE-STOP approach of introducing specific cytosine conversions, we constructed several single-gene-inactivated strains for three genes (
,
, and
) with high base editing efficiencies of average 95.6% (
= 45, C6 position) and the highest success rate of up to 100% for PTCs and ultimately developed a strain with five genes (
,
,
,
, and
) that were inactivated sequentially for enhancing succinate production. Although these mutant strains showed the desired phenotypes, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data revealed that genome-wide point mutations occurred in each strain and further accumulated according to the duration of CBE plasmids. To lower the undesirable mutations, high-fidelity CBEs (pCoryne-YE1-BE3 and pCoryne-BE3-R132E) was employed for single or multiplexed genome editing in C. glutamicum, resulting in drastically reduced sgRNA-independent off-targets. Thus, we provide a CRISPR-assisted bacterial genome engineering tool with an average high efficiency of 90.5% (
= 76, C5 or C6 position) at the desired targets.
Rat APOBEC1-derived cytosine base editor (CBE) that converts C•G to T•A at target genes induced DNA off-targets, regardless of single-guide RNA (sgRNA) sequences. Although the high efficiencies of bacterial CBEs have been developed, a risk of unidentified off-targets impeded genome editing for microbial cell factories. To address the issues, we identified the DNA off-targets for single and multiple genome engineering of the industrial bacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum using whole-genome sequencing. Further, we developed the high-fidelity (HF)-CBE with significantly reduced off-targets with comparable efficiency and precision. We believe that our DNA off-target analysis and the HF-CBE can promote CRISPR-assisted genome engineering over conventional gene manipulation tools |
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ISSN: | 2165-0497 2165-0497 |
DOI: | 10.1128/spectrum.03760-22 |