A Sensitive Technique Unravels the Kinetics of Activation and Trans-Cleavage of CRISPR-Cas Systems.
Wei FengHanyong PengHongquan ZhangMichael WeinfeldX Chris LePublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Activation of the CRISPR-Cas13a system requires the formation of a crRNA-Cas13a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex and the binding of an RNA activator to the RNP. These two binding processes play a crucial role in the performance of the CRISPR-Cas13a system. However, the binding kinetics remain poorly understood, and a main challenge is the lack of a sensitive method for real-time measurements of the dynamically formed active CRISPR-Cas13a enzyme. We describe here a new method to study the binding kinetics and report the rate constants (k on and k off ) and dissociation constant (K d ) for the binding between Cas13a and its activator. The method is able to unravel and quantify the kinetics of binding and cleavage separately, on the basis of measuring the real-time trans-cleavage rates of the CRISPR-Cas system and obtaining the real-time concentrations of the active CRISPR-Cas ternary complex. We further discovered that once activated, the Cas13a system operates at a wide range of temperatures (7-37 °C) with fast trans-cleavage kinetics. The new method and findings are important for diverse applications of the Cas13a system, such as the demonstrated quantification of microRNA at ambient temperatures (e.g., 25 °C).