| Literature DB >> 31801211 |
Sergey Brezgin1,2, Anastasiya Kostyusheva1, Dmitry Kostyushev1, Vladimir Chulanov1,3,4.
Abstract
The gene editing tool CRISPR-Cas has become the foundation for developing numerous molecular systems used in research and, increasingly, in medical practice. In particular, Cas proteins devoid of nucleolytic activity (dead Cas proteins; dCas) can be used to deliver functional cargo to programmed sites in the genome. In this review, we describe current CRISPR systems used for developing different dCas-based molecular approaches and summarize their most significant applications. We conclude with comments on the state-of-art in the CRISPR field and future directions.Entities:
Keywords: Cas9; cancer; chromatin; dCas; editing; epigenetics; hereditary diseases; infectious diseases; inflammatory diseases; transcription
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31801211 PMCID: PMC6929090 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20236041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Types and applications of dCas-based molecular tools. (A) Investigation of chromatin structure. dCas proteins tethered with specific enzymes (e.g., peroxidase) enable inducible marking (biotinylation) of chromatin factors in the vicinity of the target site. These factors can be subsequently analyzed by proteomics to study chromatin organization. (B) Base editing. dCas proteins coupled with base editing enzymes (cytidine or adenine deaminases) can be used to modify RNA or DNA, correct genetic mutations, or knock-out genes. (C) Epigenetic remodeling. dCas-based epigenome modifiers can directly alter epigenetic state at a given locus, which is frequently used to annotate gene regulatory elements. Red and green spheres indicate heterochromatin and euchromatin marks, correspondingly. (D) Programming 3D chromatin interactions. Using two dCas proteins targeting defined genomic loci can program 3D chromatin interactions. A chemical inducer stimulates dimerization of dCas proteins fused with dimerization domains building long-range connections between genomic elements. (E) Transcriptional regulation. Control of gene expression by dCas proteins tethered to transcriptional suppressors (red) or activators (green). PAM—protospacer adjacent motif; H840A and D10A are point mutations inactivating catalytic residues RuvC and HNH, correspondingly. This picture was created in BioRender software.
Figure 2Modification of CRISPR components for improved epigenetic regulation. (A) SunTag technique. dCas is fused with GCN4 peptide array, which attracts any effector molecule containing single-chain variable fragments (scFV). Multiple GCN4-scFV interactions ensure efficient recruitment of many effector molecules to the dCas-programmed genomic site. (B) Scaffold technique. In Scaffold, effector molecules are recruited to the target site via the interaction of MCP aptamer-specific protein with a short synthetic gRNA containing MS2 aptamer. gRNA protrudes out of the Cas-gRNA complex, so that chimeric gRNA-MS2 transcripts efficiently recruit effectors carrying MCP molecules. (C) TREE combines SunTag and Scaffold techniques, providing additional recruitment of effector molecules. (D) SAM is based on a two-component transcriptional effector (p65-HSF1) recruited to the target via MS2-MCP interaction. Additionally, dCas protein is tethered to a transcriptional regulator (VP64) to increase potency of the effect. This picture was created in BioRender software.
Epigenetic regulation by dCas-based tools. The number of (+) symbols indicates the potency of a particular dCas tool.
| Target | Modification | Effect on Gene Transcription | System | Efficacy |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA | Methylation | Supression | DNMT3A [ | + |
| DNMT3A-3L [ | +++ | |||
| SunTag-DNMT3A [ | +++ | |||
| Demethylation | Activation | dCas9-TET1 [ | + | |
| dCas9-SunTag-TET1 [ | +++ | |||
| dCas9/MS2/MCP-TET1 [ | +++ | |||
| Chromatin | Histone demethylation | Supression | dCas9-LSD1 [ | ++ |
| Histone acetylation | Activation | p300Core [ | ++ | |
| Transcriptional factor recruitment | Activation | VP64 [ | + | |
| VP160/VP192 [ | ++ | |||
| p65/p65-HSF1 [ | +/++ | |||
| SunTag-VP64 [ | +++ | |||
| VPR [ | +++ | |||
| SunTag-p65-HSF1 [ | ++++ | |||
| SAM [ | ++++ | |||
| TREE [ | ++++ | |||
| Casilio [ | +++ | |||
| Scaffold [ | +++ | |||
| Supression | dCas9-KRAB [ | ++ | ||
| dCas9-KRAB-MeCP2 [ | +++ | |||
| dCas9-EZH2 [ | ++ | |||
| Exogenic promoter recruitment | Activation | CMV [ | ++++ |
Applications of CRISPRi and CRISPRa tools in different areas of research and manufacture.
|
| ||
| Application | CRISPR tool | Target |
| Annotating regulatory elements | dCas9-KRAB | Distal regulatory elements [ |
| dCas9-KRAB | Estrogen receptor enhancers [ | |
| Analyzing gene function | dCas9-KRAB/ | Function of |
| Analyzing cell signaling | dCas9-VPR | Generating chimeric receptors [ |
| Identifying antiviral factors | SAM | Norovirus infection [ |
| Analyzing human genome | dCas9-KRAB | CRISPRi gRNA libraries [ |
| SAM | CRISPRa gRNA libraries [ | |
| Annotating tumor-related factors | SAM | Genes involved in cancer: |
|
| ||
| Application | CRISPR tool | Target |
| Treating infectious diseases | SAM; | HIV therapy by activating |
| dCas9-p300 | HBV therapy by activating | |
| SunTag-VP64; | Reactivating HIV in a “shock-and-kill” therapeutic approach [ | |
| Treating metabolic and inflammatory diseases | dCas9-KRAB | Repressing |
| SAM | Neuro- and nephroprotection by activating | |
| dCas9-KRAB | Repressing | |
| SAM | Generating insulin-producing cells by upregulating | |
| Treating genetic disorders | SAM | Treating DMD by activating |
| dCas9-VP64 | Treating obesity by upregulating | |
| dCas9-VP64 | Treating Dravet syndrome by upregulating | |
| dCas9 | Correcting myotonic dystrophy types 1 and 2 by blocking transcription of expanded microsatellite repeats [ | |
| dCas9-VP64 | Treating congenital muscular dystrophy type 1A by upregulating | |
| Treating cancer | dCas9-DNMT3A | Repressing |
| dCas9-VP64 | Activating tumor suppressors | |
| dCas9-VP64 | Activating telomere-targeting Cas9 nuclease in cancer cells [ | |
| SAM | Increased presentation of tumor antigens to immune cells [ | |
| Stem cell field | dCas9-VP64 | Generating iPSCs by inducing |
| dCas9-VPR | Upregulating | |
| SAM | Differentiating stem cells into adipocytes [ | |
| SAM | Neural reprogramming by activating | |
Applications of dCas-based editors in different areas of research and manufacture.
| Aim | Deaminase Domain | Applications |
|---|---|---|
| Disease modeling | AID | Mutating |
| CRISPR-X (dCas/MCP-AID) | Mutating | |
| rAPOBEC1 | Mutating | |
| TadA | Introducing SNPs to model hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin syndrome and hereditary haemochromatosis [ | |
| rAPOBEC1 | Modeling DMD and albinism by mutating | |
| Target-AID | Modeling amyloidosis by mutating | |
| rAPOBEC1 | Modeling hereditary diseases by mutating | |
| Developing new therapies | APOBEC3A | Correcting β-thalassemia-linked mutations [ |
| rAPOBEC1 | Correcting phenylketonuria-linked mutations [ | |
| rAPOBEC1 | Introducing stop codons in | |
| ADAR2 | Correcting mutations in | |
| rAPOBEC1 | Treating Marfan syndrome by correcting pathogenic mutation |
Properties of different dCas base editing systems.
| System | Change | Activity at Methylated Sites | Target | Base Editing Window |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| dCas9-rAPOBEC1 | C→T | Weak | DNA | 13–17 nt from PAM [ |
| dCas9-APOBEC3A | C→T | Potent | DNA | 13–18 nt from PAM [ |
| dCas9-AID | C→T | Weak | DNA | 16–19 nt from PAM [ |
| dCas9-TadA | A→G | - | DNA | 14–16 nt from PAM [ |
| dCas13b-ADAR2 (RESCUE) | A→I | - | RNA | - |
| dCas13b-ADAR2 | A→I | - | RNA | - |