| Literature DB >> 32213191 |
Peng Chen1, Jin Zhou1, Yibin Wan1, Huan Liu1, Yongzheng Li1, Zhaoxin Liu1, Hongjian Wang1, Jun Lei2, Kai Zhao1, Yiliang Zhang3, Yan Wang3, Xinghua Zhang4, Lei Yin5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: AsCas12a and LbCas12a nucleases are reported to be promising tools for genome engineering with protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) TTTV as the optimal. However, the C-containing PAM (CTTV, TCTV, TTCV, etc.) recognition by Cas12a might induce extra off-target edits at these non-canonical PAM sites.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; Cas12a; Gene editing; Off-targeting; PAM stringency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32213191 PMCID: PMC7093978 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-020-01989-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Fig. 1DNA cleavage of Cas12a orthologs in vitro. a DNA cleavage activities of BfCas12a and Cas12a in vitro. The Cas12a-crRNAcomplex (100 nM) was incubated at 37 °C for 10 min with DNA substrates (see also Additional file 1: Figure S4). b Schematic of in vitro cleavage assay used to identify PAM sequence and determine global PAM specificity. c Web logo for the CeCas12a PAM. d Web logo for the BfCas12a PAM. e Normalized cleavage rates for all 4-base PAMs for CeCas12a, BfCas12a, LbCas12a, and AsCas12a. The intensity of color represented the activity of Cas12a nuclease. f Quantification of time-course in vitro cleavage reactions of Cas12a orthologs on linearized dsDNA substrates. Those were conducted at nine time points, respectively. Curves were fit using the one phase exponential decay equation
Fig. 2CeCas12a and BfCas12a mediate gene editing in human cells. a Efficiencies of EGFP disruption in human cells mediated by CeCas12a and crRNAs bearing variable-length complementarity regions for the target site of EGFP in human cells. Error bars indicate standard errors of means (s.e.m.), n = 3. ***P < 0.001 (Mann-Whitney). b Efficiencies of EGFP disruption mediated by BfCas12a and crRNAs bearing variable-length complementarity regions for the target site of EGFP in human cells. Error bars represent s.e.m., n = 3. ***P < 0.001 (Mann-Whitney). c Efficiencies of EGFP disruption in human cells mediated by Cas12a orthologs and crRNA bearing 23-nt length complementarity regions for the target site of EGFP in human cells. Error bars represent s.e.m., n = 3. ***P < 0.001 (Mann-Whitney). d The suitability of Cas12a with crRNAs containing different loop regions from Cas12a orthologs. Data are shown as mean ± s.e.m. (n = 3); **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 (Mann-Whitney). e Efficiencies of targeted indel mutations introduced at five different human endogenous gene targets by CeCas12a and BfCas12a. Indel frequencies of PD1, HBB, IL12A, DNMT1, and TRAC were measured by T7E1 assay. f Summaries of the activities of CeCas12a at TTTV PAMs at a diverse panel of target sites in HEK293T cells. For indel percentages, each column represents the mean of n = 3 transfected cell cultures. Indel frequencies were analyzed by T7E1 assay. g Comparison of CeCas12a and Cas12a orthologs’ gene-editing efficiencies. Three target sites are from VEGFA loci. Indel frequencies analyzed by T7E1 assay. h Cas12a-mediated multiplex gene editing in human cells. Schematic of CRISPR array construct with the U6 direct repeat spacer cassette containing B2M, CTLA4, TRAC, and TRBC protospacer sequences (top). Indel frequencies were analyzed by T7E1 assay after transfection with CRISPR array and Cas12a plasmids (bottom)
Fig. 3The stringency of CeCas12a, LbCas12a, and AsCas12a for recognizing canonical TTTV and non-canonical C-containing PAMs in human cells. a In vivo cleavage activities of Lb, As, and Ce toward different PAMs. Indel frequencies for 82 endogenous target sites with the different PAMs were measured in mammalian cells by deep sequencing. Percent modified indicates the percentage of reads containing indels compared with the wild-type sequence. b Stringency for recognizing canonical TTTV and non-canonical C-containing PAMs. The relative percent modified frequency was determined by the ratio of C-containing PAM to TTTV PAM. Data are shown as mean ± s.e.m. (n = 3); *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 (Mann-Whitney)
Fig. 4Assessment off-target effects of CRISPR-Cas nucleases. a Mean percent modification by Lb, As, and Ce at POLQ, DNMT1, and IL12A on-target sites. Percent modifications were determined by deep sequencing. Bars show mean ± s.e.m. for n = 3 transfected cell cultures. Indel mutation frequencies were indicated by the percentage of reads containing indels compared with the wild-type sequence reads. b Illustration of off-target sites at PAM sequence. Mismatches at PAM sequence and spacer are red. c Mean percent modification at off-target site 1 (OT1) (left), and specificity ratios of LbCas12a, AsCas12a, and CeCas12a with the POLQ, DNMT1, and IL12A crRNAs, plotted as the ratio of OT1 site activity to on-target activity (right). Data are shown as mean ± s.e.m. (n = 3). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001 (Mann-Whitney). d Mean percent modification by Lb, As, and Ce at off-target sites when targeting POLQ target 1. OT2, OT3, OT5, and OT6 were predicted by Cas-OFFinder, and mismatches are in spacer region (Additional file 1: Figure S13). e Matched target sites for Cas12a, Cas12b, and SpCas9 that share a common protospacer sequence. f Histograms illustrating the number of GUIDE-seq detected off-target sites for CeCas12a, AsCas12a, LbCas12a, enAsCas12a-HF1, spCas9, and BhCas12b v4. na, not assessed. g Off-target sites for CeCas12a, AsCas12a, LbCas12a, enAsCas12a-HF1, and BhCas12b v4 with DNMT1 and HEK293 site1 crRNAs, determined using GUIDE-seq in HEK293 cells. Mismatched positions are highlighted in color, and GUIDE-seq read counts are shown to the right of the on- or off-target sequences