| Literature DB >> 34011687 |
Ben A Evans1, Douglas A Bernstein2.
Abstract
Candida albicans is a human fungal pathogen capable of causing life-threatening infections. The ability to edit the C. albicans genome using CRISPR/Cas9 is an important tool investigators can leverage in their search for novel therapeutic targets. However, wild-type Cas9 requires an NGG protospacer adjacent motif (PAM), leaving many AT-rich regions of DNA inaccessible. A recently described near-PAMless CRISPR system that utilizes the SpRY Cas9 variant can target non-NGG PAM sequences. Using this system as a model, we developed C. albicans CRISPR/SpRY. We tested our system by mutating C. albicans ADE2 and show that CRISPR/SpRY can utilize non-NGG PAM sequences in C. albicans Our CRISPR/SpRY system will allow researchers to efficiently modify C. albicans DNA that lacks NGG PAM sequences.IMPORTANCE Genetic modification of the human fungal pathogen Candida albicans allows us to better understand how fungi differ from humans at the molecular level and play essential roles in the development of therapeutics. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome editing systems can be used to introduce site-specific mutations to C. albicans However, wild-type Cas9 is limited by the requirement of an NGG PAM site. CRISPR/SpRY targets a variety of different PAM sequences. We modified the C. albicans CRISPR/Cas9 system using the CRISPR/SpRY as a guide. We tested CRISPR/SpRY on C. albicans ADE2 and show that our SpRY system can facilitate genome editing independent of an NGG PAM sequence, thus allowing the investigator to target AT-rich sequences. Our system will potentially enable mutation of the 125 C. albicans genes which have been previously untargetable with CRISPR/Cas9. Additionally, our system will allow for precise targeting of many genomic locations that lack NGG PAM sites.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; Candida albicans; PAM site; genome editing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34011687 PMCID: PMC8265644 DOI: 10.1128/mSphere.00303-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: mSphere ISSN: 2379-5042 Impact factor: 4.389
FIG 1(A) PAM sites targeted between bases 1 and 150 of ADE2. The number after the colon indicates the first nucleotide of the PAM site as measured from the 5′ end of the ADE2 coding region. (B) Mutation of C. albicans by CRISPR/SpRY and CRISPR/Cas9 at NGG and non-NGG PAM sequences.
ADE2 PAM sites targeted by SpRY
| PAM sequence | % red colonies | Coding noncoding strand |
|---|---|---|
| AGA:83 | 40 | Coding |
| GAC:84 | 25 | Coding |
| CAG:121 | 20 | Coding |
| AGA:122 | 5 | Coding |
| ACA:120 | 2 | Coding |
| ACC:85 | 2 | Coding |
| TAG:134 | 2 | Coding |
| CAA:58 | 1 | Noncoding |
| GGT:87 | <1 | Noncoding |
| CGG:88 | <1 | Noncoding |
| TAC:90 | <1 | Noncoding |
| AGA:135 | <1 | Coding |
| AGG:27 | 0 | Coding |
| TAG:26 | 0 | Coding |
| TTA:25 | 0 | Coding |
| TGT:54 | 0 | Coding |
| TTG:53 | 0 | Coding |
| CTC:31 | 0 | Noncoding |
| CCT:29 | 0 | Noncoding |
| CTA:28 | 0 | Noncoding |
| ACA:56 | 0 | Noncoding |
| TGT:122 | 0 | Noncoding |
| CTG:123 | 0 | Noncoding |
| TCT:124 | 0 | Noncoding |
| CGT:139 | 0 | Noncoding |
| TCT:137 | 0 | Noncoding |
PAM sites targeted with pV1093:SpRY. Numbers next to the PAM sequences represent the first nucleotide of the sequence as measured from the 5′ end of ADE2. All transformations were performed in duplicate except for AGA:83, GAC:84, and CAG:121, which were performed in triplicate. Editing efficiencies are represented as an average percentage of red colonies found across replicates.