Selection of extended CRISPR RNAs with enhanced targeting and specificity

As CRISPR effectors like Cas9 increasingly enter clinical trials for therapeutic gene editing, a future for personalized medicine will require efficient methods to protect individuals from the potential of off-target mutations that may also occur at specific sequences in their genomes that are simil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communications biology 2024-01, Vol.7 (1), p.86-86, Article 86
Hauptverfasser: Herring-Nicholas, Ashley, Dimig, Hillary, Roesing, Miranda R., Josephs, Eric A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As CRISPR effectors like Cas9 increasingly enter clinical trials for therapeutic gene editing, a future for personalized medicine will require efficient methods to protect individuals from the potential of off-target mutations that may also occur at specific sequences in their genomes that are similar to the therapeutic target. A Cas9 enzyme’s ability to recognize their targets (and off-targets) are determined by the sequence of their RNA-cofactors (their guide RNAs or gRNAs). Here, we present a method to screen hundreds of thousands of gRNA variants with short, randomized 5’ nucleotide extensions near its DNA-targeting segment—a modification that can increase gene editing specificity by orders of magnitude—to identify extended gRNAs (x-gRNAs) that effectively block any activity at those off-target sites while still maintaining strong activity at their intended targets. X-gRNAs that have been selected for specific target / off-target pairs can significantly out-perform other methods that reduce Cas9 off-target activity overall, like using Cas9 variants engineered for higher specificity in general, and we demonstrate their effectiveness in clinically-relevant gRNAs. Our streamlined approach to efficiently identify highly specific and active x-gRNAs provides a way to move beyond a one-size-fits-all model of high-fidelity CRISPR for safer and more effective personalized gene therapies. CRISPR-Cas enzymes are increasingly entering clinical trials for gene therapies but can sometimes alter DNA off-target. We present an approach to modify the guide RNA to effectively eliminate off-target activity for target sequences of interest.
ISSN:2399-3642
2399-3642
DOI:10.1038/s42003-024-05776-8