Large DNA deletions occur during DNA repair at 20-fold lower frequency for base editors and prime editors than for Cas9 nucleases

When used to edit genomes, Cas9 nucleases produce targeted double-strand breaks in DNA. Subsequent DNA-repair pathways can induce large genomic deletions (larger than 100 bp), which constrains the applicability of genome editing. Here we show that Cas9-mediated double-strand breaks induce large dele...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature biomedical engineering 2024-11, Vol.9 (1), p.79-92
Hauptverfasser: Hwang, Gue-Ho, Lee, Seok-Hoon, Oh, Minsik, Kim, Segi, Habib, Omer, Jang, Hyeon-Ki, Kim, Heon Seok, Kim, Youngkuk, Kim, Chan Hyuk, Kim, Sun, Bae, Sangsu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:When used to edit genomes, Cas9 nucleases produce targeted double-strand breaks in DNA. Subsequent DNA-repair pathways can induce large genomic deletions (larger than 100 bp), which constrains the applicability of genome editing. Here we show that Cas9-mediated double-strand breaks induce large deletions at varying frequencies in cancer cell lines, human embryonic stem cells and human primary T cells, and that most deletions are produced by two repair pathways: end resection and DNA-polymerase theta-mediated end joining. These findings required the optimization of long-range amplicon sequencing, the development of a k -mer alignment algorithm for the simultaneous analysis of large DNA deletions and small DNA alterations, and the use of CRISPR-interference screening. Despite leveraging mutated Cas9 nickases that produce single-strand breaks, base editors and prime editors also generated large deletions, yet at approximately 20-fold lower frequency than Cas9. We provide strategies for the mitigation of such deletions. DNA repair after Cas9-mediated double-strand breaks induces large DNA deletions at frequencies 20-fold higher than elicited by base editors and prime editors leveraging Cas9 nickases producing single-strand breaks.
ISSN:2157-846X
2157-846X
DOI:10.1038/s41551-024-01277-5