Expanded base editing in rice and wheat using a Cas9-adenosine deaminase fusion

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Abstract

Nucleotide base editors in plants have been limited to conversion of cytosine to thymine. Here, we describe a new plant adenine base editor based on an evolved tRNA adenosine deaminase fused to the nickase CRISPR/Cas9, enabling A·T to G·C conversion at frequencies up to 7.5% in protoplasts and 59.1% in regenerated rice and wheat plants. An endogenous gene is also successfully modified through introducing a gain-of-function point mutation to directly produce an herbicide-tolerant rice plant. With this new adenine base editing system, it is now possible to precisely edit all base pairs, thus expanding the toolset for precise editing in plants.

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Li, C., Zong, Y., Wang, Y., Jin, S., Zhang, D., Song, Q., … Gao, C. (2018). Expanded base editing in rice and wheat using a Cas9-adenosine deaminase fusion. Genome Biology, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-018-1443-z

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