53 research outputs found

    DNA hydrolysis and genome editing applications of GIY-YIG family homing endonucleases

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    The ability to manipulate complex genomes in a precise manner is essential for studying biological processes in model systems, engineering plant strains for agriculture, or advancing human cellular therapies to treat diseases. Genomic alterations are most efficient when a double-strand DNA break is introduced at the loci where the modification is desired. Different classes of naturally occurring DNA endonucleases, including homing endonucleases, have therefore been explored as candidates for genome modification studies as they target long stretches of DNA. Homing endonucleases are mobile genetic elements whose biological role is to introduce site-specific double-strand breaks into naïve genomes, ultimately resulting in the selfish propagation of their own genes. Consequently, homing endonucleases are an ideal enzymatic system whose natural properties can be exploited to manipulate genes. In the present studies, I examine the cleavage mechanism of GIY-YIG family homing endonucleases, as until now the method by which they hydrolyze DNA has remained poorly understood. Using the GIY-YIG homing endonuclease I-BmoI as a model system, I investigate the amino acid, nucleotide, and divalent metal ion requirements of the GIY-YIG nuclease domain to generate a double-strand break. I specifically test models of hydrolysis by which enzymes with a single active site could nick both strands of DNA, and determine that I-BmoI functions as a monomer throughout the reaction pathway. Furthermore, I demonstrate that the nuclease domain itself has weak binding affinity, is tethered to DNA by a high affinity binding domain, and must reposition across each strand through a series of protein and substrate conformational changes to facilitate DNA hydrolysis. To explore the relevance of GIY-YIG homing endonucleases as genome editing reagents, I fused the nuclease domain of I-TevI to three different re-targetable DNA-binding platforms utilized in the field. The engineered nucleases developed within the present studies are mechanistically distinct from established technologies, as they function as monomers and cleave DNA at a preferred sequence motif. I therefore envision that the engineered GIY-YIG nucleases may circumvent complications associated with established technologies, and provide an alternative and potentially safer set of genome editing reagents

    Altering, Improving, And Defining The Specificities Of Crispr-Cas Nucleases

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    CRISPR-Cas9 nucleases have been widely adopted for genome editing applications to knockout genes or to introduce desired changes. While these nucleases have shown immense promise, two notable limitations of the wild-type form of the broadly used Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 (SpCas9) are the restriction of targeting range to sites that contain an NGG protospacer adjacent motif (PAM), and the undesirable ability of the enzyme to cleave off-target sites that resemble the on-target site. Scarcity of PAM motifs can limit implementations that require precise targeting, whereas off-target effects can confound research applications and are important considerations for therapeutics. To improve the targeting range of SpCas9 and an orthogonal Cas9 from Staphylococcus aureus (called SaCas9), we optimized a heterologous genetic selection system that enabled us to perform directed evolution of PAM specificity. With SpCas9, we evolved two separate variants that can target NGA and NGCG PAMs1, and with SaCas9 relaxed the PAM from NNGRRT to NNNRRT2, increasing the targetability of these enzyme 2- to 4-fold. The genome-wide specificity profiles of SpCas9 and SaCas9 variants, determine by GUIDE-seq3, indicate that they are at least as, if not more, specific than the wild-type enzyme1,2. Together, these results demonstrate that the inherent PAM specificity of multiple different Cas9 orthologues can be purposefully modified to improve the accuracy of targeting. Existing strategies for improving the genome-wide specificity of SpCas9 have thus far proven to be incompletely effective and/or have other limitations that constrain their use. To address the off-target potential of SpCas9, we engineered a high-fidelity variant of SpCas9 (called SpCas9-HF1), that contains alterations designed to reduce non-specific contacts to the target strand DNA backbone. In comparison to wild-type SpCas9, SpCas9-HF1 rendered all or nearly all off-target events imperceptible by GUIDE-seq and targeted deep-sequencing methods with standard non-repetitive target sites in human cells4. Even for atypical, repetitive target sites, the vast majority of off-targets induced by SpCas9-HF1 and optimized derivatives were not detected4. With its exceptional precision, SpCas9-HF1 provides an important and easily employed alternative to wild-type SpCas9 that can eliminate off-target effects when using CRISPR-Cas9 for research and therapeutic applications. Finally, on-target activity and genome-wide specificity are two important properties of engineered nucleases that should be characterized prior to adoption of such technologies for research or therapeutic applications. CRISPR-Cas Cpf1 nucleases have recently been described as an alternative genome-editing platform5, yet their activities and genome-wide specificities remain largely undefined. Based on assessment of on-target activity across more than 40 target sites, we demonstrate that two Cpf1 orthologues function robustly in human cells with efficiencies comparable to those of the widely used Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9. We also demonstrate that four to six bases at the 3’ end of the short CRISPR RNA (crRNA) used to program Cpf1 are insensitive to single base mismatches, but that many of the other bases within the crRNA targeting region are highly sensitive to single or double substitutions6. Consistent with these results, GUIDE-seq performed in multiple cell types and targeted deep sequencing analyses of two Cpf1 nucleases revealed no detectable off-target cleavage for over half of 20 different crRNAs we examined. Our results suggest that the two Cpf1 nucleases we characterized generally possess robust on-target activity and high specificities in human cells, findings that should encourage broader use of these genome editing enzymes. 1. Kleinstiver, BP, et al. (2015) Nature, 523(7561):481-5 2. Kleinstiver, BP, et al. (2015) Nature Biotechnology, 33(12):1293-98 3. Tsai, SQ et al. (2015) Nature Biotechnology, 33(2):187-97 4. Kleinstiver, BP and Pattanayak, V, et al. (2016), Nature, 529(7587):490-5 5. Zetsche, B, et al. (2015) Cell, 163(3):759-71 6. Kleinstiver, BP and Tsai, SQ, et al. (2016), Nature Biotechnology, 34(8):869-7

    PAM-flexible genome editing with an engineered chimeric Cas9

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    CRISPR enzymes require a defined protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) flanking a guide RNA-programmed target site, limiting their sequence accessibility for robust genome editing applications. In this study, we recombine the PAM-interacting domain of SpRY, a broad-targeting Cas9 possessing an NRN > NYN (R = A or G, Y = C or T) PAM preference, with the N-terminus of Sc + +, a Cas9 with simultaneously broad, efficient, and accurate NNG editing capabilities, to generate a chimeric enzyme with highly flexible PAM preference: SpRYc. We demonstrate that SpRYc leverages properties of both enzymes to specifically edit diverse PAMs and disease-related loci for potential therapeutic applications. In total, the approaches to generate SpRYc, coupled with its robust flexibility, highlight the power of integrative protein design for Cas9 engineering and motivate downstream editing applications that require precise genomic positioning

    Evolution of CRISPR-associated endonucleases as inferred from resurrected proteins

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    Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-associated Cas9 is an effector protein that targets invading DNA and plays a major role in the prokaryotic adaptive immune system. Although Streptococcus pyogenes CRISPR–Cas9 has been widely studied and repurposed for applications including genome editing, its origin and evolution are poorly understood. Here, we investigate the evolution of Cas9 from resurrected ancient nucleases (anCas) in extinct firmicutes species that last lived 2.6 billion years before the present. We demonstrate that these ancient forms were much more flexible in their guide RNA and protospacer-adjacent motif requirements compared with modern-day Cas9 enzymes. Furthermore, anCas portrays a gradual palaeoenzymatic adaptation from nickase to double-strand break activity, exhibits high levels of activity with both single-stranded DNA and single-stranded RNA targets and is capable of editing activity in human cells. Prediction and characterization of anCas with a resurrected protein approach uncovers an evolutionary trajectory leading to functionally flexible ancient enzymes.This work has been supported by grant nos. PID2019-109087RB-I00 (to R.P.-J.) and RTI2018-101223-B-I00 and PID2021-127644OB-I00 (to L.M.) from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement no. 964764 (to R.P.-J.). The content presented in this document represents the views of the authors, and the European Commission has no liability in respect to the content. We acknowledge financial support from the Spanish Foundation for the Promotion of Research of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. A.F. acknowledges Spanish Center for Biomedical Network Research on Rare Diseases (CIBERE) intramural funds (no. ER19P5AC756/2021). F.J.M.M. acknowledges research support by Conselleria d’Educació, Investigació, Cultura i Esport from Generalitat Valenciana, research project nos. PROMETEO/2017/129 and PROMETEO/2021/057. M.M. acknowledges funding from CIBERER (grant no. ER19P5AC728/2021). The work has received funding from the Regional Government of Madrid (grant no. B2017/BMD3721 to M.A.M.-P.) and from Instituto de Salud Carlos III, cofounded with the European Regional Development Fund ‘A way to make Europe’ within the National Plans for Scientific and Technical Research and Innovation 2017–2020 and 2021–2024 (nos. PI17/1659, PI20/0429 and IMP/00009; to M.A.M.-P. B.P.K. was supported by an MGH ECOR Howard M. Goodman Award and NIH P01 HL142494

    Camptothecin resistance is determined by the regulation of topoisomerase I degradation mediated by ubiquitin proteasome pathway

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    Proteasomal degradation of topoisomerase I (topoI) is one of the most remarkable cellular phenomena observed in response to camptothecin (CPT). Importantly, the rate of topoI degradation is linked to CPT resistance. Formation of the topoI-DNA-CPT cleavable complex inhibits DNA re-ligation resulting in DNA-double strand break (DSB). The degradation of topoI marks the first step in the ubiquitin proteasome pathway (UPP) dependent DNA damage response (DDR). Here, we show that the Ku70/Ku80 heterodimer binds with topoI, and that the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) phosphorylates topoI on serine 10 (topoI-pS10), which is subsequently ubiquitinated by BRCA1. A higher basal level of topoI-pS10 ensures rapid topoI degradation leading to CPT resistance. Importantly, PTEN regulates DNA-PKcs kinase activity in this pathway and PTEN deletion ensures DNA-PKcs dependent higher topoI-pS10, rapid topoI degradation and CPT resistance

    Estimating the evidence of selection and the reliability of inference in unigenic evolution

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Unigenic evolution is a large-scale mutagenesis experiment used to identify residues that are potentially important for protein function. Both currently-used methods for the analysis of unigenic evolution data analyze 'windows' of contiguous sites, a strategy that increases statistical power but incorrectly assumes that functionally-critical sites are contiguous. In addition, both methods require the questionable assumption of asymptotically-large sample size due to the presumption of approximate normality.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We develop a novel approach, termed the Evidence of Selection (EoS), removing the assumption that functionally important sites are adjacent in sequence and and explicitly modelling the effects of limited sample-size. Precise statistical derivations show that the EoS score can be easily interpreted as an expected log-odds-ratio between two competing hypotheses, namely, the hypothetical presence or absence of functional selection for a given site. Using the EoS score, we then develop selection criteria by which functionally-important yet non-adjacent sites can be identified. An approximate power analysis is also developed to estimate the reliability of inference given the data. We validate and demonstrate the the practical utility of our method by analysis of the homing endonuclease <monospace>I-Bmol</monospace>, comparing our predictions with the results of existing methods.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our method is able to assess both the evidence of selection at individual amino acid sites and estimate the reliability of those inferences. Experimental validation with <monospace>I-Bmol</monospace> proves its utility to identify functionally-important residues of poorly characterized proteins, demonstrating increased sensitivity over previous methods without loss of specificity. With the ability to guide the selection of precise experimental mutagenesis conditions, our method helps make unigenic analysis a more broadly applicable technique with which to probe protein function.</p> <p>Availability</p> <p>Software to compute, plot, and summarize EoS data is available as an open-source package called 'unigenic' for the 'R' programming language at <url>http://www.fernandes.org/txp/article/13/an-analytical-framework-for-unigenic-evolution</url>.</p

    Divalent metal ion differentially regulates the sequential nicking reactions of the GIY-YIG homing endonuclease I-BmoI.

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    Homing endonucleases are site-specific DNA endonucleases that function as mobile genetic elements by introducing double-strand breaks or nicks at defined locations. Of the major families of homing endonucleases, the modular GIY-YIG endonucleases are least understood in terms of mechanism. The GIY-YIG homing endonuclease I-BmoI generates a double-strand break by sequential nicking reactions during which the single active site of the GIY-YIG nuclease domain must undergo a substantial reorganization. Here, we show that divalent metal ion plays a significant role in regulating the two independent nicking reactions by I-BmoI. Rate constant determination for each nicking reaction revealed that limiting divalent metal ion has a greater impact on the second strand than the first strand nicking reaction. We also show that substrate mutations within the I-BmoI cleavage site can modulate the first strand nicking reaction over a 314-fold range. Additionally, in-gel DNA footprinting with mutant substrates and modeling of an I-BmoI-substrate complex suggest that amino acid contacts to a critical GC-2 base pair are required to induce a bottom-strand distortion that likely directs conformational changes for reaction progress. Collectively, our data implies mechanistic roles for divalent metal ion and substrate bases, suggesting that divalent metal ion facilitates the re-positioning of the GIY-YIG nuclease domain between sequential nicking reactions

    A Unified Genetic, Computational and Experimental Framework Identifies Functionally Relevant Residues of the Homing Endonuclease I-BmoI

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    Insight into protein structure and function is best obtained through a synthesis of experimental, structural and bioinformatic data. Here, we outline a framework that we call MUSE (mutual information, unigenic evolution and structure-guided elucidation), which facilitated the identification of previously unknown residues that are relevant for function of the GIY-YIG homing endonuclease I-BmoI. Our approach synthesizes three types of data: mutual information analyses that identify co-evolving residues within the GIY-YIG catalytic domain; a unigenic evolution strategy that identifies hyper- and hypo-mutable residues of I-BmoI; and interpretation of the unigenic and co-evolution data using a homology model. In particular, we identify novel positions within the GIY-YIG domain as functionally important. Proof-of-principle experiments implicate the non-conserved I71 as functionally relevant, with an I71N mutant accumulating a nicked cleavage intermediate. Moreover, many additional positions within the catalytic, linker and C-terminal domains of I-BmoI were implicated as important for function. Our results represent a platform on which to pursue future studies of I-BmoI and other GIY-YIG-containing proteins, and demonstrate that MUSE can successfully identify novel functionally critical residues that would be ignored in a traditional structure-function analysis within an extensively studied small domain of approximately 90 amino acids
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