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Programmable deaminase-free base editors for G-to-Y conversion by engineered glycosylase.

Huawei TongNana LiuYinghui WeiYingsi ZhouYun LiDanni WuMing JinShuna CuiHengbin LiGuoling LiJingxing ZhouYuan YuanHainan ZhangLinyu ShiXuan YaoHui Yang
Published in: National science review (2023)
Current DNA base editors contain nuclease and DNA deaminase that enables deamination of cytosine (C) or adenine (A), but no method for guanine (G) or thymine (T) editing is available at present. Here we developed a deaminase-free glycosylase-based guanine base editor (gGBE) with G editing ability, by fusing Cas9 nickase with engineered N-methylpurine DNA glycosylase protein (MPG). By several rounds of MPG mutagenesis via unbiased and rational screening using an intron-split EGFP reporter, we demonstrated that gGBE with engineered MPG could increase G editing efficiency by more than 1500 fold. Furthermore, this gGBE exhibited high base editing efficiency (up to 81.2%) and high G-to-T or G-to-C (i.e. G-to-Y) conversion ratio (up to 0.95) in both cultured human cells and mouse embryos. Thus, we have provided a proof-of-concept of a new base editing approach by endowing the engineered DNA glycosylase the capability to selectively excise a new type of substrate.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • genome editing
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  • cell free
  • dna repair
  • single molecule
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  • dna damage
  • oxidative stress
  • amino acid
  • dna binding