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C-to-G editing generates double-strand breaks causing deletion, transversion and translocation.

Min Emma HuangYining QinYafang ShangQian HaoChuanzong ZhanChaoyang LianSimin LuoLiu Daisy LiuSenxin ZhangYu ZhangYang WoNiu LiShuheng WuTuantuan GuiBinbin WangYifeng LuoYanni CaiXiaojing LiuZiye XuPengfei DaiSimiao LiLiang ZhangJunchao DongJian WangXiaoqi ZhengYingjie XuYihua SunWei WuLeng-Siew YeapFei-Long Meng
Published in: Nature cell biology (2024)
Base editors (BEs) introduce base substitutions without double-strand DNA cleavage. Besides precise substitutions, BEs generate low-frequency 'stochastic' byproducts through unclear mechanisms. Here, we performed in-depth outcome profiling and genetic dissection, revealing that C-to-G BEs (CGBEs) generate substantial amounts of intermediate double-strand breaks (DSBs), which are at the centre of several byproducts. Imperfect DSB end-joining leads to small deletions via end-resection, templated insertions or aberrant transversions during end fill-in. Chromosomal translocations were detected between the editing target and off-targets of Cas9/deaminase origin. Genetic screenings of DNA repair factors disclosed a central role of abasic site processing in DSB formation. Shielding of abasic sites by the suicide enzyme HMCES reduced CGBE-initiated DSBs, providing an effective way to minimize DSB-triggered events without affecting substitutions. This work demonstrates that CGBEs can initiate deleterious intermediate DSBs and therefore require careful consideration for therapeutic applications, and that HMCES-aided CGBEs hold promise as safer tools.
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