Engineering a far-red light-activated split-Cas9 system for remote-controlled genome editing of internal organs and tumors

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Abstract

It is widely understood that CRISPR-Cas9 technology is revolutionary, with well-recognized issues including the potential for off-target edits and the attendant need for spatiotemporal control of editing. Here, we describe a far-red light (FRL)-activated split-Cas9 (FAST) system that can robustly induce gene editing in both mammalian cells and mice. Through light-emitting diode-based FRL illumination, the FAST system can efficiently edit genes, including nonhomologous end joining and homology-directed repair, for multiple loci in human cells. Further, we show that FAST readily achieves FRL-induced editing of internal organs in tdTomato reporter mice. Finally, FAST was demonstrated to achieve FRL-triggered editing of the PLK1 oncogene in a mouse xenograft tumor model. Beyond extending the spectrum of light energies in optogenetic toolbox for CRISPR-Cas9 technologies, this study demonstrates how FAST system can be deployed for programmable deep tissue gene editing in both biological and biomedical contexts toward high precision and spatial specificity.

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Yu, Y., Wu, X., Guan, N., Shao, J., Li, H., Chen, Y., … Ye, H. (2020). Engineering a far-red light-activated split-Cas9 system for remote-controlled genome editing of internal organs and tumors. Science Advances, 6(28). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abb1777

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