4.5 Article

CRISPR-Cas9 bends and twists DNA to read its sequence

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NATURE STRUCTURAL & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
卷 29, 期 4, 页码 395-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41594-022-00756-0

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
  2. NHMRC Investigator grant [1175568]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  4. National Science Foundation [1817593]
  5. Centers for Excellence in Genomic Science of the National Institutes of Health [RM1HG009490]
  6. National Institutes of Health [U01AI142817-02]
  7. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1175568] Funding Source: NHMRC
  8. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences [1817593] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Researchers have discovered that the Cas9 protein bends and twists DNA when binding to PAM, allowing DNA nucleotides to be extracted from the double helix and examined by the guide RNA. This finding is significant for understanding the efficiency of genome editing.
In bacterial defense and genome editing applications, the CRISPR-associated protein Cas9 searches millions of DNA base pairs to locate a 20-nucleotide, guide RNA-complementary target sequence that abuts a protospacer-adjacent motif (PAM). Target capture requires Cas9 to unwind DNA at candidate sequences using an unknown ATP-independent mechanism. Here we show that Cas9 sharply bends and undertwists DNA on PAM binding, thereby flipping DNA nucleotides out of the duplex and toward the guide RNA for sequence interrogation. Cryogenic-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of Cas9-RNA-DNA complexes trapped at different states of the interrogation pathway, together with solution conformational probing, reveal that global protein rearrangement accompanies formation of an unstacked DNA hinge. Bend-induced base flipping explains how Cas9 'reads' snippets of DNA to locate target sites within a vast excess of nontarget DNA, a process crucial to both bacterial antiviral immunity and genome editing. This mechanism establishes a physical solution to the problem of complementarity-guided DNA search and shows how interrogation speed and local DNA geometry may influence genome editing efficiency.

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