Publication:
High-throughput continuous evolution of compact Cas9 variants targeting single-nucleotide-pyrimidine PAMs

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2022-09-08

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Huang, Tony P., Zachary J. Heins, Shannon M. Miller, Brandon G. Wong, Pallavi A. Balivada, Tina Wang, Ahmad S. Khalil et al. "High-throughput continuous evolution of compact Cas9 variants targeting single-nucleotide-pyrimidine PAMs." Nat Biotechnol 41, no. 1 (2022): 96-107. DOI: 10.1038/s41587-022-01410-2

Research Data

Abstract

Despite the availability of Cas9 variants with varied protospacer-adjacent motif (PAM) compatibilities, some genomic loci—especially those with pyrimidine-rich PAM sequences—remain inaccessible by high-activity Cas9 proteins. Moreover, broadening PAM sequence compatibility through engineering can increase off-target activity. With directed evolution, we generated four Cas9 variants that together enable targeting of most pyrimidine-rich PAM sequences in the human genome. Using phage-assisted noncontinuous evolution and eVOLVER-supported phage-assisted continuous evolution, we evolved Nme2Cas9, a compact Cas9 variant, into variants that recognize single-nucleotide pyrimidine-PAM sequences. We developed a general selection strategy that requires functional editing with fully specified target protospacers and PAMs. We applied this selection to evolve high-activity variants eNme2-T.1, eNme2-T.2, eNme2-C and eNme2-C.NR. Variants eNme2-T.1 and eNme2-T.2 offer access to N4TN PAM sequences with comparable editing efficiencies as existing variants, while eNme2-C and eNme2-C.NR offer less restrictive PAM requirements, comparable or higher activity in a variety of human cell types and lower off-target activity at N4CN PAM sequences.

Description

Other Available Sources

Keywords

Biomedical Engineering, Molecular Medicine, Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, Bioengineering, Biotechnology

Terms of Use

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories