4.8 Article

Programmable base editing of A.T to G.C in genomic DNA without DNA cleavage

Journal

NATURE
Volume 551, Issue 7681, Pages 464-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature24644

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DARPA [HR0011-17-2-0049]
  2. US NIH [RM1 HG009490, R01 EB022376, R35 GM118062]
  3. HHMI
  4. Ruth L. Kirchstein National Research Service Awards [F32 GM 112366, F32 GM106621]
  5. [T32 GM008313]

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The spontaneous deamination of cytosine is a major source of transitions from C.G to T.A base pairs, which account for half of known pathogenic point mutations in humans. The ability to efficiently convert targeted A.T base pairs to G.C could therefore advance the study and treatment of genetic diseases. The deamination of adenine yields inosine, which is treated as guanine by polymerases, but no enzymes are known to deaminate adenine in DNA. Here we describe adenine base editors (ABEs) that mediate the conversion of A.T to G.C in genomic DNA. We evolved a transfer RNA adenosine deaminase to operate on DNA when fused to a catalytically impaired CRISPR-Cas9 mutant. Extensive directed evolution and protein engineering resulted in seventh-generation ABEs that convert targeted A.T base pairs efficiently to G.C (approximately 50% efficiency in human cells) with high product purity (typically at least 99.9%) and low rates of indels (typically no more than 0.1%). ABEs introduce point mutations more efficiently and cleanly, and with less off-target genome modification, than a current Cas9 nuclease-based method, and can install disease-correcting or disease-suppressing mutations in human cells. Together with previous base editors, ABEs enable the direct, programmable introduction of all four transition mutations without double-stranded DNA cleavage.

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