Structure-guided discovery of highly efficient cytidine deaminases with sequence-context independence

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Abstract

The applicability of cytosine base editors is hindered by their dependence on sequence context and by off-target effects. Here, by using AlphaFold2 to predict the three-dimensional structure of 1,483 cytidine deaminases and by experimentally characterizing representative deaminases (selected from each structural cluster after categorizing them via partitional clustering), we report the discovery of a few deaminases with high editing efficiencies, diverse editing windows and increased ratios of on-target to off-target effects. Specifically, several deaminases induced C-to-T conversions with comparable efficiency at AC/TC/CC/GC sites, the deaminases could introduce stop codons in single-copy and multi-copy genes in mammalian cells without double-strand breaks, and some residue conversions at predicted DNA-interacting sites reduced off-target effects. Structure-based generative machine learning could be further leveraged to expand the applicability of base editors in gene therapies.

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Xu, K., Feng, H., Zhang, H., He, C., Kang, H., Yuan, T., … Zuo, E. (2024). Structure-guided discovery of highly efficient cytidine deaminases with sequence-context independence. Nature Biomedical Engineering. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41551-024-01220-8

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