| Literature DB >> 29186020 |
Tuhin K Guha1, David R Edgell2.
Abstract
Breakthroughs in the development of programmable site-specific nucleases, including zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs), transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), meganucleases (MNs), and most recently, the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) associated proteins (including Cas9) have greatly enabled and accelerated genome editing. By targeting double-strand breaks to user-defined locations, the rates of DNA repair events are greatly enhanced relative to un-catalyzed events at the same sites. However, the underlying biology of each genome-editing nuclease influences the targeting potential, the spectrum of off-target cleavages, the ease-of-use, and the types of recombination events at targeted double-strand breaks. No single genome-editing nuclease is optimized for all possible applications. Here, we focus on the diversity of nuclease domains available for genome editing, highlighting biochemical properties and the potential applications that are best suited to each domain.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; FokI; GIY-YIG nuclease domain; TALEN; ZFN; dimeric nuclease; monomeric nuclease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29186020 PMCID: PMC5751168 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18122565
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Genome-editing nucleases.
| Nuclease Domain | Property | Type of DSB | Associated Reagents |
|---|---|---|---|
| FokI | Type IIS, dimeric, non-specific nuclease | 3-nt 5′ overhang | ZFNs, TALENs, Cas9-FokI |
| I-TevI | GIY-YIG, monomeric, site-specific | 2-nt 3′ overhang | ZFEs, TALENs, MegaTev, TevCas9 |
| PvuII | Type IIP, homodimeric, site-specific | Blunt end | I-SceI-PvuII, ZF-PvuII, PvuII-LHE |
| Recombinase | Serine recombinase (Sin recombinase); invertase Gin | Not applicable | ZF-recombinase, TALE-recombinase |
| Cas9 | Type II CRISPR/Cas family; RuvC/HNH nuclease domains; monomeric; requires PAM sequence; moderate specificity | Blunt end | CRISPR/Cas9, CRISPRi, Cas9-FokI |
| Cpf1 | Monomeric; non-specific; recognizes T-rich PAM sequence at the 5′ of the guide RNA | 5-nt 5′ overhang | CRISPR/Cpf1 |
| Meganuclease | LAGLIDADG family, monomeric or dimeric; very specific | 4-nt 3′ overhang | MegaTAL, TALE-I-SceI, MegaTev |
DSB, double-strand break; ZFNs, zinc-finger nucleases; Cas9, CRISPR-associated protein 9; GIY-YIG, the GIY-YIG family of homing endonucleases; MegaTev, a chimeric fusion of a meganuclease and the catalytic and linker domains of I-TevI; ZF, zinc finger; LHE, LAGLIDADG homing endonuclease; CRISPR, clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats; PAM, protospacer-associated motif; Sin, Staphylococcal invertase-like gene; Gin, G-segment invertase; Cpf1, CRISPR from Prevotella and Francisella; RuvC, ultraviolet-light sensitive gene C; HNH, His-Me finger nuclease domain.
Comparison of four commonly used genome-editing nucleases.
| Property | Cas9 | ZFN | TALEN | Meganuclease |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Specificity (off-target) | Relatively non-specific | Relatively non-specific | Specific | Very specific |
| Biasing events (repair) | NHEJ | NHEJ | HDR | HDR |
| Design & targeting constraints | PAM requirement (NGG for SpCas9) | Context-dependent assembly of ZFs; GC rich targets preferred | Assembly of TALE repeats; 5′ targeted base is T | Re-design of protein-DNA interface; central 4 bases intolerant to change |
| Dimerization required | No | Yes | Yes | No |
| Coding sequence | Long | Short | Long and repetitive | Short |
| Therapeutic delivery | Easy | Moderate | Moderate | Easy |
| Vector packaging | Moderate | Difficult | Difficult | Easy |
| Multiplex potential | High | Low | Low | High |
| Cost-effective | Yes | No | Moderate | No |
NHEJ, non-homologous end joining; HDR, homology-directed repair.
Figure 1DNA double-strand break repair pathways. (A) Homology dependent repair, applicable in the presence of a homologous repair template (green) and error-free non-homologous end joining pathway. The later, however, is responsible for the regeneration of the target site through religation of the paired end complex. Red lightning symbol indicates introduction of a DSB. Large red arrow highlights efficient repair and regeneration of the nuclease target site by NHEJ. (B) Schematic model representing how TevCas9 can bias DNA repair outcome (see text for details). Red dashed rectangles, endonuclease target site; green dashed rectangles, mutated target site after error-prone repair. NHEJ, non-homologous end joining; HDR, homology directed repair; cNHEJ, classical NHEJ; alt-NHEJ, alternative-NHEJ.