| Literature DB >> 34949802 |
Wen Xu1, Yongxing Yang1, Biying Yang2, Christopher J Krueger3,4, Qianlin Xiao5, Si Zhao1, Lu Zhang1, Guiting Kang1, Feipeng Wang1, Hongmei Yi1, Wen Ren1, Lu Li1, Xiaoqing He1, Chuanmao Zhang2, Bo Zhang2, Jiuran Zhao6, Jinxiao Yang7.
Abstract
The ability to manipulate the genome in a programmable manner has illuminated biology and shown promise in plant breeding. Prime editing, a versatile gene-editing approach that directly writes new genetic information into a specified DNA site without requiring double-strand DNA breaks, suffers from low efficiency in plants1-5. In this study, N-terminal reverse transcriptase-Cas9 nickase fusion performed better in rice than the commonly applied C-terminal fusion. In addition, introduction of multiple-nucleotide substitutions in the reverse transcriptase template stimulated prime editing with enhanced efficiency. By using these two methods synergistically, prime editing with an average editing frequency as high as 24.3% at 13 endogenous targets in rice transgenic plants, 6.2% at four targets in maize protoplasts and 12.5% in human cells was achieved, which is two- to threefold higher than the original editor, Prime Editor 3. Therefore, our optimized approach has potential to make more formerly non-editable target sites editable, and expands the scope and capabilities of prime editing in the future.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34949802 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-021-01043-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 17.352