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RNA-Activated CRISPR/Cas12a Nanorobots Operating in Living Cells.

Aijiao YuanRui ShaWenjing XieGuangbo QuHongquan ZhangHai-Lin WangX Chris LeGui-Bin JiangHanyong Peng
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Active clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR/Cas12a) systems possess both cis -cleavage (targeted) and trans -cleavage (collateral) activities, which are useful for genome engineering and diagnostic applications. Both single- and double-stranded DNA can activate crRNA-Cas12a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) to achieve cis - and trans -cleavage enzymatic activities. However, it is not clear whether RNA can activate the CRISPR/Cas12a system and what is critical to the trans -cleavage activity. We report here that RNA can activate the CRISPR/Cas12a system and trigger its trans -cleavage activity. We reveal that the activated crRNA-Cas12a RNP favors the trans -cleavage of longer sequences than commonly used. These new findings of the RNA-activated trans -cleavage capability of Cas12a provided the foundation for the design and construction of CRISPR nanorobots that operate in living cells. We assembled the crRNA-Cas12a RNP and nucleic acid substrates on gold nanoparticles to form CRISPR nanorobots, which dramatically increased the local effective concentration of the substrate in relation to the RNP and the trans -cleavage kinetics. Binding of the target microRNA to the crRNA-Cas12a RNP activated the nanorobots and their trans -cleavage function. The repeated (multiple-turnover) trans -cleavage of the fluorophore-labeled substrates generated amplified fluorescence signals. Sensitive and real-time imaging of specific microRNA in live cells demonstrated the promising potential of the CRISPR nanorobot system for future applications in monitoring and modulating biological functions within living cells.
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