Cas12a-Capture: A Novel, Low-Cost, and Scalable Method for Targeted Sequencing.
Taylor L MighellAndrew NishidaBrendan L O'ConnellCaitlin V MillerSally GrindstaffCasey A ThorntonAndrew C AdeyDaniel DohertyBrian J O'RoakPublished in: The CRISPR journal (2022)
Targeted sequencing remains a valuable technique for clinical and research applications. However, many existing technologies suffer from pervasive guanine-cytosine (GC) sequence content bias, high input DNA requirements, and high cost for custom panels. We have developed Cas12a-Capture, a low-cost and highly scalable method for targeted sequencing. The method utilizes preprogrammed guide RNAs to direct CRISPR-Cas12a cleavage of double-stranded DNA in vitro and then takes advantage of the resulting four to five nucleotide overhangs for selective ligation with a custom sequencing adapter. Addition of a second sequencing adapter and enrichment for ligation products generates a targeted sequence library. We first performed a pilot experiment with 7176 guides targeting 3.5 Mb of DNA. Using these data, we modeled the sequence determinants of Cas12a-Capture efficiency, then designed an optimized set of 11,438 guides targeting 3.0 Mb. The optimized guide set achieves an average 64-fold enrichment of targeted regions with minimal GC bias. Cas12a-Capture variant calls had strong concordance with Illumina Platinum Genome calls, especially for single nucleotide variants, which could be improved by applying basic variant quality heuristics. We believe Cas12a-Capture has a wide variety of potential clinical and research applications and is amendable for selective enrichment for any double-stranded DNA template or genome.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- genome editing
- low cost
- cancer therapy
- circulating tumor
- single cell
- cell free
- single molecule
- nucleic acid
- drug delivery
- gene expression
- clinical trial
- binding protein
- electronic health record
- risk assessment
- genome wide
- circulating tumor cells
- gas chromatography
- quality improvement
- deep learning
- high resolution