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Harnessing type I CRISPR-Cas systems for genome engineering in human cells.

Peter CameronMary M CoonsSanne E KlompeAlexandra M LiedStephen C SmithBastien VidalPaul D DonohoueTomer RotsteinBryan W KohrsDavid B NyerRachel KennedyLynda M BanhCarolyn WilliamsMckenzi S TohMatthew J IrbyLeslie S EdwardsChun-Han LinArthur L G OwenTim KünneJohn van der OostStan J J BrounsEuan M SlorachChris K FullerScott GradiaSteven B KannerAndrew P MaySamuel H Sternberg
Published in: Nature biotechnology (2019)
Type I CRISPR-Cas systems are the most abundant adaptive immune systems in bacteria and archaea1,2. Target interference relies on a multi-subunit, RNA-guided complex called Cascade3,4, which recruits a trans-acting helicase-nuclease, Cas3, for target degradation5-7. Type I systems have rarely been used for eukaryotic genome engineering applications owing to the relative difficulty of heterologous expression of the multicomponent Cascade complex. Here, we fuse Cascade to the dimerization-dependent, non-specific FokI nuclease domain8-11 and achieve RNA-guided gene editing in multiple human cell lines with high specificity and efficiencies of up to ~50%. FokI-Cascade can be reconstituted via an optimized two-component expression system encoding the CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins on a single polycistronic vector and the guide RNA (gRNA) on a separate plasmid. Expression of the full Cascade-Cas3 complex in human cells resulted in targeted deletions of up to ~200 kb in length. Our work demonstrates that highly abundant, previously untapped type I CRISPR-Cas systems can be harnessed for genome engineering applications in eukaryotic cells.
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