Synthetic chimeric nucleases function for efficient genome editing

CRISPR–Cas systems have revolutionized genome editing across a broad range of biotechnological endeavors. Many CRISPR-Cas nucleases have been identified and engineered for improved capabilities. Given the modular structure of such enzymes, we hypothesized that engineering chimeric sequences would ge...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2019-12, Vol.10 (1), p.5524-11, Article 5524
Hauptverfasser: Liu, R. M., Liang, L. L., Freed, E., Chang, H., Oh, E., Liu, Z. Y., Garst, A., Eckert, C. A., Gill, R. T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:CRISPR–Cas systems have revolutionized genome editing across a broad range of biotechnological endeavors. Many CRISPR-Cas nucleases have been identified and engineered for improved capabilities. Given the modular structure of such enzymes, we hypothesized that engineering chimeric sequences would generate non-natural variants that span the kinetic parameter landscape, and thus provide for the rapid selection of nucleases fit for a particular editing system. Here, we design a chimeric Cas12a-type library with approximately 560 synthetic chimeras, and select several functional variants. We demonstrate that certain nuclease domains can be recombined across distantly related nuclease templates to produce variants that function in bacteria, yeast, and human cell lines. We further characterize selected chimeric nucleases and find that they have different protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) preferences and the M44 chimera has higher specificity relative to wild-type (WT) sequences. This demonstration opens up the possibility of generating nuclease sequences with implications across biotechnology. CRISPR-Cas systems have well characterized, modular structures. Here the authors use that architecture to design a Cas12a library of 560 synthetic chimeras, with altered PAM preferences and specificities.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-019-13500-y