4.8 Article

Generation of a nicking enzyme that stimulates site-specific gene conversion from the I-AniI LAGLIDADG homing endonuclease

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0810588106

Keywords

protein engineering; recombination; single strand breaks; gene therapy; gene repair

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 GM49857, RL1 CA133833, 1RL1 CA133831, RL1 GM084434]
  2. Gates Foundation
  3. National Science Foundation
  4. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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Homing endonucleases stimulate gene conversion by generating site-specific DNA double-strand breaks that are repaired by homologous recombination. These enzymes are potentially valuable tools for targeted gene correction and genome engineering. We have engineered a variant of the I-AniI homing endonuclease that nicks its cognate target site. This variant contains a mutation of a basic residue essential for proton transfer and solvent activation in one active site. The cleavage mechanism, DNA-binding affinity, and substrate specificity profile of the nickase are similar to the wildtype enzyme. I-AniI nickase stimulates targeted gene correction in human cells, in cis and in trans, at approximate to 1/4 the efficiency of the wild-type enzyme. The development of sequence-specific nicking enzymes like the I-AniI nickase will facilitate comparative analyses of DNA repair and mutagenesis induced by single- or double-strand breaks.

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