Improved prime editors enable pathogenic allele correction and cancer modelling in adult mice.
Pengpeng LiuShun-Qing LiangChunwei ZhengEsther MintzerYan G ZhaoKarthikeyan PonnienselvanAamir MirErik J SontheimerGuangping GaoTerence R FlotteScot A WolfeWen XuePublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Prime editors (PEs) mediate genome modification without utilizing double-stranded DNA breaks or exogenous donor DNA as a template. PEs facilitate nucleotide substitutions or local insertions or deletions within the genome based on the template sequence encoded within the prime editing guide RNA (pegRNA). However, the efficacy of prime editing in adult mice has not been established. Here we report an NLS-optimized SpCas9-based prime editor that improves genome editing efficiency in both fluorescent reporter cells and at endogenous loci in cultured cell lines. Using this genome modification system, we could also seed tumor formation through somatic cell editing in the adult mouse. Finally, we successfully utilize dual adeno-associated virus (AAVs) for the delivery of a split-intein prime editor and demonstrate that this system enables the correction of a pathogenic mutation in the mouse liver. Our findings further establish the broad potential of this genome editing technology for the directed installation of sequence modifications in vivo, with important implications for disease modeling and correction.
Keyphrases
- crispr cas
- genome editing
- genome wide
- childhood cancer
- circulating tumor
- induced apoptosis
- nucleic acid
- single molecule
- high fat diet induced
- dna methylation
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- single cell
- quantum dots
- papillary thyroid
- binding protein
- adipose tissue
- mesenchymal stem cells
- cell proliferation
- high resolution
- squamous cell
- copy number
- circulating tumor cells