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Adenine transversion editors enable precise, efficient A•T-to-C•G base editing in mammalian cells and embryos.

Liang ChenMengjia HongChangming LuanHongyi GaoGaomeng RuXinyuan GuoDujuan ZhangShun ZhangChangwei LiJun WuPeyton B RandolphAlexander A SousaChao QuYifan ZhuYuting GuanLiren WangMingyao LiuBo FengGaojie SongDavid R LiuDali Li
Published in: Nature biotechnology (2023)
Base editors have substantial promise in basic research and as therapeutic agents for the correction of pathogenic mutations. The development of adenine transversion editors has posed a particular challenge. Here we report a class of base editors that enable efficient adenine transversion, including precise A•T-to-C•G editing. We found that a fusion of mouse alkyladenine DNA glycosylase (mAAG) with nickase Cas9 and deaminase TadA-8e catalyzed adenosine transversion in specific sequence contexts. Laboratory evolution of mAAG significantly increased A-to-C/T conversion efficiency up to 73% and expanded the targeting scope. Further engineering yielded adenine-to-cytosine base editors (ACBEs), including a high-accuracy ACBE-Q variant, that precisely install A-to-C transversions with minimal Cas9-independent off-targeting effects. ACBEs mediated high-efficiency installation or correction of five pathogenic mutations in mouse embryos and human cell lines. Founder mice showed 44-56% average A-to-C edits and allelic frequencies of up to 100%. Adenosine transversion editors substantially expand the capabilities and possible applications of base editing technology.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • genome editing
  • high efficiency
  • endothelial cells
  • single molecule
  • machine learning
  • protein kinase
  • cell free
  • circulating tumor cells
  • artificial intelligence
  • pluripotent stem cells