Optimized nickase- and nuclease-based prime editing in human and mouse cells

Author:

Adikusuma Fatwa123ORCID,Lushington Caleb12,Arudkumar Jayshen12,Godahewa Gelshan I24,Chey Yu C J12,Gierus Luke12,Piltz Sandra125,Geiger Ashleigh123,Jain Yatish67,Reti Daniel67,Wilson Laurence O W67,Bauer Denis C687,Thomas Paul Q125

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedicine and Robinson Research Institute, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia

2. Genome Editing Program, South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI), Adelaide, SA, Australia

3. CSIRO Synthetic Biology Future Science Platform, Australia

4. Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness, CSIRO Health and Biosecurity, Geelong, VIC, Australia

5. South Australian Genome Editing (SAGE), South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute (SAHMRI), Adelaide, SA, Australia

6. Australian e-Health Research Centre, CSIRO, North Ryde, Australia

7. Applied BioSciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering, Macquarie University, New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

8. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Macquarie University, New South Wales, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Precise genomic modification using prime editing (PE) holds enormous potential for research and clinical applications. In this study, we generated all-in-one prime editing (PEA1) constructs that carry all the components required for PE, along with a selection marker. We tested these constructs (with selection) in HEK293T, K562, HeLa and mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells. We discovered that PE efficiency in HEK293T cells was much higher than previously observed, reaching up to 95% (mean 67%). The efficiency in K562 and HeLa cells, however, remained low. To improve PE efficiency in K562 and HeLa, we generated a nuclease prime editor and tested this system in these cell lines as well as mouse ES cells. PE-nuclease greatly increased prime editing initiation, however, installation of the intended edits was often accompanied by extra insertions derived from the repair template. Finally, we show that zygotic injection of the nuclease prime editor can generate correct modifications in mouse fetuses with up to 100% efficiency.

Funder

Australian CSIRO Synthetic Biology Future Science Platform

Emerging Leaders Development Award of Faculty of Health & Medical Science, University of Adelaide

Phenomics Australia

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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