4.8 Article

Continuous evolution of base editors with expanded target compatibility and improved activity

Journal

NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41587-019-0193-0

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US NIH [U01 AI142756, RM1 HG009490, R01 EB022376, R35 GM118062]
  2. St. Jude Collaborative Research Consortium
  3. DARPA [HR0011-17-2-0049]
  4. Ono Pharma Foundation
  5. HHMI
  6. NSF
  7. NIH [DC013521, T32 GM095450]
  8. Harvard College Research Program
  9. Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation [DRG-2343-18]

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Base editors use DNA-modifying enzymes targeted with a catalytically impaired CRISPR protein to precisely install point mutations. Here, we develop phage-assisted continuous evolution of base editors (BE-PACE) to improve their editing efficiency and target sequence compatibility. We used BE-PACE to evolve cytosine base editors (CBEs) that overcome target sequence context constraints of canonical CBEs. One evolved CBE, evoAPOBEC1-BE4max, is up to 26-fold more efficient at editing cytosine in the GC context, a disfavored context for wild-type APOBEC1 deaminase, while maintaining efficient editing in all other sequence contexts tested. Another evolved deaminase, evoFERNY, is 29% smaller than APOBEC1 and edits efficiently in all tested sequence contexts. We also evolved a CBE based on CDA1 deaminase with much higher editing efficiency at difficult target sites. Finally, we used data from evolved CBEs to illuminate the relationship between deaminase activity, base editing efficiency, editing window width and byproduct formation. These findings establish a system for rapid evolution of base editors and inform their use and improvement. Improved base editors are generated by continuous evolution.

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