Potent CRISPR-Cas9 inhibitors from genomes.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720;

Published: March 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Anti-CRISPRs (Acrs) are proteins that block the CRISPR-Cas system from targeting DNA, which can help viruses evade destruction and limit genome editing in eukaryotic cells.
  • Researchers identified three effective Acr inhibitors of the SauCas9 enzyme, named AcrIIA13, AcrIIA14, and AcrIIA15, through specialized screening methods.
  • These Acrs have similar structures at one end but different sequences at the other, affecting their ability to inhibit the Cas9 enzyme, with AcrIIA13 showing the strongest inhibition in human cells.

Article Abstract

Anti-CRISPRs (Acrs) are small proteins that inhibit the RNA-guided DNA targeting activity of CRISPR-Cas enzymes. Encoded by bacteriophage and phage-derived bacterial genes, Acrs prevent CRISPR-mediated inhibition of phage infection and can also block CRISPR-Cas-mediated genome editing in eukaryotic cells. To identify Acrs capable of inhibiting Cas9 (SauCas9), an alternative to the most commonly used genome editing protein Cas9 (SpyCas9), we used both self-targeting CRISPR screening and guilt-by-association genomic search strategies. Here we describe three potent inhibitors of SauCas9 that we name AcrIIA13, AcrIIA14, and AcrIIA15. These inhibitors share a conserved N-terminal sequence that is dispensable for DNA cleavage inhibition and have divergent C termini that are required in each case for inhibition of SauCas9-catalyzed DNA cleavage. In human cells, we observe robust inhibition of SauCas9-induced genome editing by AcrIIA13 and moderate inhibition by AcrIIA14 and AcrIIA15. We also find that the conserved N-terminal domain of AcrIIA13-AcrIIA15 binds to an inverted repeat sequence in the promoter of these Acr genes, consistent with its predicted helix-turn-helix DNA binding structure. These data demonstrate an effective strategy for Acr discovery and establish AcrIIA13-AcrIIA15 as unique bifunctional inhibitors of SauCas9.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7104187PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1917668117DOI Listing

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