A positive, growth-based PAM screen identifies noncanonical motifs recognized by the S. pyogenes Cas9

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Abstract

CRISPR technologies have overwhelmingly relied on the Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 (SpyCas9), with its consensus NGG and less preferred NAG and NGA protospacer-adjacent motifs (PAMs). Here, we report that SpyCas9 also recognizes sequences within an N(A/C/T)GG motif. These sequences were identified on the basis of preferential enrichment in a growth-based screen in Escherichia coli. DNA binding, cleavage, and editing assays in bacteria and human cells validated recognition, with activities paralleling those for NAG(A/C/T) PAMs and dependent on the first two PAM positions. Molecular-dynamics simulations and plasmid-clearance assays with mismatch-intolerant variants supported induced-fit recognition of an extended PAM by SpyCas9 rather than recognition of NGG with a bulged R-loop. Last, the editing location for SpyCas9-derived base editors could be shifted by one nucleotide by selecting between (C/T)GG and adjacent N(C/T)GG PAMs. SpyCas9 and its enhanced variants thus recognize a larger repertoire of PAMs, with implications for precise editing, off-target predictions, and CRISPR-based immunity.

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Collias, D., Leenay, R. T., Slotkowski, R. A., Zuo, Z., Collins, S. P., McGirr, B. A., … Beisel, C. L. (2020). A positive, growth-based PAM screen identifies noncanonical motifs recognized by the S. pyogenes Cas9. Science Advances, 6(29). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abb4054

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