Creation of novel protein variants with CRISPR/Cas9-mediated mutagenesis: Turning a screening by-product into a discovery tool

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Abstract

CRISPR/Cas9 screening has proven to be a versatile tool for genomics research. Based on unexpected results from a genome-wide screen, we developed a CRISPR/Cas9-mediated approach to mutagenesis, exploiting the allelic diversity generated by error-prone nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) to identify novel gain-of-function and drug resistant alleles of the MAPK signaling pathway genes MEK1 and BRAF. We define the parameters of a scalable technique to easily generate cell populations containing thousands of endogenous allelic variants to map gene functions. Further, these results highlight an unexpected but important phenomenon, that Cas9-induced gain-of-function alleles are an inherent by-product of normal Cas9 loss-of-function screens and should be investigated during analysis of data from large-scale positive selection screens.

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Donovan, K. F., Hegde, M., Sullender, M., Vaimberg, E. W., Johannessen, C. M., Root, D. E., & Doench, J. G. (2017). Creation of novel protein variants with CRISPR/Cas9-mediated mutagenesis: Turning a screening by-product into a discovery tool. PLoS ONE, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0170445

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