Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biology
2. Brown University Mouse Transgenic & Gene Targeting Facility
Abstract
The intuitive manipulation of specific amino acids to alter the activity or specificity of CRISPR-Cas9 has been a topic of great interest. As a large multi-domain RNA-guided endonuclease, the intricate molecular crosstalk within the Cas9 protein hinges on its conformational dynamics, but a comprehensive understanding of the extent and timescale of the motions that drive its allosteric function and association with nucleic acids remains elusive. Here, we investigated the structure and multi-timescale molecular motions of the recognition (Rec) lobe of
Geo
Cas9, a thermophilic Cas9 from
Geobacillus stearothermophilus.
Our results provide new atomic details about the
Geo
Rec subdomains (
Geo
Rec1,
Geo
Rec2) and the full-length domain in solution. Two single-point mutants, K267E and R332A, enhanced and redistributed micro-millisecond flexibility throughout
Geo
Rec, and NMR studies of the interaction between
Geo
Rec and its guide RNA showed that mutations reduced this affinity and the stability of the ribonucleoprotein complex. Despite measured biophysical differences due to the mutations, DNA cleavage assays reveal only modest functional differences in on-target activity, and similar specificity. These data highlight how guide RNA interactions can be tuned in the absence of major functional losses, but also raise questions about the underlying mechanism of
Geo
Cas9, since analogous single-point mutations have significantly impacted on- and off-target DNA editing in mesophilic
S. pyogenes
Cas9. A K267E/R332A double mutant did modestly enhance
Geo
Cas9 specificity, highlighting the robust evolutionary tolerance of Cas9 and species-dependent complexity. Ultimately, this work provides an avenue by which to modulate the structure, motion, and nucleic acid interactions at the level of the Rec lobe of
Geo
Cas9, setting the stage for future studies of
Geo
Cas9 variants and their effect on its allosteric mechanism.
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd