Enabling large-scale genome editing at repetitive elements by reducing DNA nicking

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Abstract

To extend the frontier of genome editing and enable editing of repetitive elements of mammalian genomes, we made use of a set of dead-Cas9 base editor (dBE) variants that allow editing at tens of thousands of loci per cell by overcoming the cell death associated with DNA double-strand breaks and single-strand breaks. We used a set of gRNAs targeting repetitive elements - ranging in target copy number from about 32 to 161 000 per cell. dBEs enabled survival after large-scale base editing, allowing targeted mutations at up to ∼13 200 and ∼12 200 loci in 293T and human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs), respectively, three orders of magnitude greater than previously recorded. These dBEs can overcome current on-target mutation and toxicity barriers that prevent cell survival after large-scale genome engineering.

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Smith, C. J., Castanon, O., Said, K., Volf, V., Khoshakhlagh, P., Hornick, A., … Church, G. M. (2020). Enabling large-scale genome editing at repetitive elements by reducing DNA nicking. Nucleic Acids Research, 48(9), 5183–5195. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaa239

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