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CRISPR-Cas9 Activities with Truncated 16-Nucleotide RNA Guides Are Tuned by Target Duplex Stability Beyond the RNA/DNA Hybrid.

Yue LiBrendon H CooperYukang LiuDifei WuXiaojun ZhangRemo RohsPeter Z Qin
Published in: Biochemistry (2023)
CRISPR-Cas9 has been adapted as a readily programmable genome manipulation agent, and continuing technological advances rely on an in-depth mechanistic understanding of Cas9 target discrimination. Cas9 interrogates a target by unwinding the DNA duplex to form an R-loop, where the RNA guide hybridizes with one of the DNA strands. It has been shown that RNA guides shorter than the normal length of 20-nucleotide (-nt) support Cas9 cleavage activity by enabling partial unwinding beyond the RNA/DNA hybrid. To investigate whether DNA segment beyond the RNA/DNA hybrid can impact Cas9 target discrimination with truncated guides, Cas9 double-stranded DNA cleavage rates ( k cat ) were measured with 16-nt guides on targets with varying sequences at +17 to +20 positions distal to the protospacer-adjacent-motif (PAM). The data reveal a log-linear inverse correlation between k cat and the PAM+(17-20) DNA duplex dissociation free energy (Δ G NN(17-20) 0 ), with sequences having smaller Δ G NN(17-20) 0 showing faster cleavage and a higher degree of unwinding. The results indicate that, with a 16-nt guide, "peripheral" DNA sequences beyond the RNA/DNA hybrid contribute to target discrimination by tuning the cleavage reaction transition state through the modulation of PAM-distal unwinding. The finding provides mechanistic insights for the further development of strategies that use RNA guide truncation to enhance Cas9 specificity.
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