Systematic discovery of natural CRISPR-Cas12a inhibitors

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Abstract

Cas12a (Cpf1) is a CRISPR-associated nuclease with broad utility for synthetic genome engineering, agricultural genomics, and biomedical applications. Although bacteria harboring CRISPR-Cas9 or CRISPR-Cas3 adaptive immune systems sometimes acquire mobile genetic elements encoding anti-CRISPR proteins that inhibit Cas9, Cas3, or the DNA-binding Cascade complex, no such inhibitors have been found for CRISPR-Cas12a. Here we use a comprehensive bioinformatic and experimental screening approach to identify three different inhibitors that block or diminish CRISPR-Cas12a-mediated genome editing in human cells. We also find a widespread connection between CRISPR selftargeting and inhibitor prevalence in prokaryotic genomes, suggesting a straightforward path to the discovery of many more anti-CRISPRs from the microbial world.

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Watters, K. E., Fellmann, C., Bai, H. B., Ren, S. M., & Doudna, J. A. (2018). Systematic discovery of natural CRISPR-Cas12a inhibitors. Science, 362(6411), 236–239. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aau5138

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