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Single C-to-T substitution using engineered APOBEC3G-nCas9 base editors with minimum genome- and transcriptome-wide off-target effects
Author(s) -
Sangsin Lee,
Ning Ding,
Yidi Sun,
Tanglong Yuan,
Jing Li,
Qichen Yuan,
Lizhong Liu,
Jie Yang,
Qian Wang,
Anatoly B. Kolomeisky,
Isaac B. Hilton,
Erwei Zuo,
Xue Gao
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aba1773
Subject(s) - transcriptome , context (archaeology) , computational biology , genome , base (topology) , substitution (logic) , apobec3g , biology , computer science , genetics , gene , gene expression , mathematics , cytidine deaminase , paleontology , mathematical analysis , programming language
Cytosine base editors (CBEs) enable efficient cytidine-to-thymidine (C-to-T) substitutions at targeted loci without double-stranded breaks. However, current CBEs edit all Cs within their activity windows, generating undesired bystander mutations. In the most challenging circumstance, when a bystander C is adjacent to the targeted C, existing base editors fail to discriminate them and edit both Cs. To improve the precision of CBE, we identified and engineered the human APOBEC3G (A3G) deaminase; when fused to the Cas9 nickase, the resulting A3G-BEs exhibit selective editing of the second C in the 5'-CC-3' motif in human cells. Our A3G-BEs could install a single disease-associated C-to-T substitution with high precision. The percentage of perfectly modified alleles is more than 6000-fold for disease correction and more than 600-fold for disease modeling compared with BE4max. On the basis of the two-cell embryo injection method and RNA sequencing analysis, our A3G-BEs showed minimum genome- and transcriptome-wide off-target effects, achieving high targeting fidelity.

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