4.8 Article

Engineering a precise adenine base editor with minimal bystander editing

Journal

NATURE CHEMICAL BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 101-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41589-022-01163-8

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Through structure-guided engineering, ABE9 has been developed with improved editing accuracy, reduced bystander and off-target editing effects, and can efficiently generate disease models and achieve high-precision editing at pathogenic polyadenosine sites.
Adenine base editors (ABEs) catalyze A-to-G transitions showing broad applications, but their bystander mutations and off-target editing effects raise safety concerns. Through structure-guided engineering, we found ABE8e with an N108Q mutation reduced both adenine and cytosine bystander editing, and introduction of an additional L145T mutation (ABE9), further refined the editing window to 1-2 nucleotides with eliminated cytosine editing. Importantly, ABE9 induced very minimal RNA and undetectable Cas9-independent DNA off-target effects, which mainly installed desired single A-to-G conversion in mouse and rat embryos to efficiently generate disease models. Moreover, ABE9 accurately edited the A(5) position of the protospacer sequence in pathogenic homopolymeric adenosine sites (up to 342.5-fold precision over ABE8e) and was further confirmed through a library of guide RNA-target sequence pairs. Owing to the minimized editing window, ABE9 could further broaden the targeting scope for precise correction of pathogenic single-nucleotide variants when fused to Cas9 variants with expanded protospacer adjacent motif compatibility. bpNLS, bipartite nuclear localization signals.

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