Cas9 exo-endonuclease eliminates chromosomal translocations during genome editing.
Jianhang YinRusen LuChangchang XinYuhong WangXinyu LingDong LiWeiwei ZhangMengzhu LiuWutao XieLingyun KongWen SiPing WeiBingbing XiaoHsiang-Ying LeeTao LiuJiazhi HuPublished in: Nature communications (2022)
The mechanism underlying unwanted structural variations induced by CRISPR-Cas9 remains poorly understood, and no effective strategy is available to inhibit the generation of these byproducts. Here we find that the generation of a high level of translocations is dependent on repeated cleavage at the Cas9-targeting sites. Therefore, we employ a strategy in which Cas9 is fused with optimized TREX2 to generate Cas9TX, a Cas9 exo-endonuclease, which prevents perfect DNA repair and thereby avoids repeated cleavage. In comparison with CRISPR-Cas9, CRISPR-Cas9TX greatly suppressed translocation levels and enhanced the editing efficiency of single-site editing. The number of large deletions associated with Cas9TX was also reduced to very low level. The application of CRISPR-Cas9TX for multiplex gene editing in chimeric antigen receptor T cells nearly eliminated deleterious chromosomal translocations. We report the mechanism underlying translocations induced by Cas9, and propose a general strategy for reducing chromosomal abnormalities induced by CRISPR-RNA-guided endonucleases.