1. Improving CRISPR–Cas9 directed faithful transgene integration outcomes by reducing unwanted random DNA integration.
- Author
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Hermantara, Rio, Richmond, Laura, Taqi, Aqeel Faisal, Chilaka, Sabari, Jeantet, Valentine, Guerrini, Ileana, West, Katherine, and West, Adam
- Subjects
CRISPRS ,DOUBLE-strand DNA breaks ,GENE targeting ,GENOME editing ,DNA ,REPORTER genes - Abstract
Background: The field of genome editing has been revolutionized by the development of an easily programmable editing tool, the CRISPR–Cas9. Despite its promise, off-target activity of Cas9 posed a great disadvantage for genome editing purposes by causing DNA double strand breaks at off-target locations and causing unwanted editing outcomes. Furthermore, for gene integration applications, which introduce transgene sequences, integration of transgenes to off-target sites could be harmful, hard to detect, and reduce faithful genome editing efficiency. Method: Here we report the development of a multicolour fluorescence assay for studying CRISPR–Cas9-directed gene integration at an endogenous locus in human cell lines. We examine genetic integration of reporter genes in transiently transfected cells as well as puromycin-selected stable cell lines to determine the fidelity of multiple CRISPR–Cas9 strategies. Result: We found that there is a high occurrence of unwanted DNA integration which tarnished faithful knock-in efficiency. Integration outcomes are influenced by the type of DNA DSBs, donor design, the use of enhanced specificity Cas9 variants, with S-phase regulated Cas9 activity. Moreover, restricting Cas9 expression with a self-cleaving system greatly improves knock-in outcomes by substantially reducing the percentage of cells with unwanted DNA integration. Conclusion: Our results highlight the need for a more stringent assessment of CRISPR–Cas9-mediated knock-in outcomes, and the importance of careful strategy design to maximise efficient and faithful transgene integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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