Compact zinc finger architecture utilizing toxin-derived cytidine deaminases for highly efficient base editing in human cells

Friedrich Fauser, Bhakti N. Kadam, Sebastian Arangundy-Franklin, Jessica E. Davis, Vishvesha Vaidya, Nicola J. Schmidt, Garrett Lew,Danny F. Xia, Rakshaa Mureli, Colman Ng,Yuanyue Zhou, Nicholas A. Scarlott, Jason Eshleman, Yuri R. Bendaña,David A. Shivak,Andreas Reik,Patrick Li,Gregory D. Davis, Jeffrey C. Miller

Nature Communications(2024)

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摘要
Nucleobase editors represent an emerging technology that enables precise single-base edits to the genomes of eukaryotic cells. Most nucleobase editors use deaminase domains that act upon single-stranded DNA and require RNA-guided proteins such as Cas9 to unwind the DNA prior to editing. However, the most recent class of base editors utilizes a deaminase domain, DddA tox , that can act upon double-stranded DNA. Here, we target DddA tox fragments and a FokI-based nickase to the human CIITA gene by fusing these domains to arrays of engineered zinc fingers (ZFs). We also identify a broad variety of Toxin-Derived Deaminases (TDDs) orthologous to DddA tox that allow us to fine-tune properties such as targeting density and specificity. TDD-derived ZF base editors enable up to 73% base editing in T cells with good cell viability and favorable specificity.
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