An enhanced Eco1 retron editor enables precision genome engineering in human cells without double-strand breaks

Kavli Affiliate: Charles M. Rice

| Authors: Matthew A Cattle, Lauren C Aguado, Samantha Sze, Dylan Yueyang Wang, Thales Papagiannakopoulos, Susan Smith, Charles M Rice, William Matthew Schneider and John T Poirier

| Summary:

Retrons are a retroelement class found in diverse prokaryotes that can be adapted to augment CRISPR-Cas9 genome engineering technology to efficiently rewrite short stretches of genetic information in bacteria and yeast. However, efficiency in human cells has been limited by unknown factors. We identified non-coding RNA (ncRNA) instability and impaired Cas9 activity due to 5’ sgRNA extension as key contributors to low retron editor efficiency in human cells. We re-engineered the Eco1 ncRNA to incorporate an exoribonuclease-resistant RNA (xrRNA) pseudoknot from the Zika virus 3’ UTR and devised an RNA processing strategy using Csy4 ribonuclease to minimize 5’ sgRNA extension. This strategy increased steady-state ncRNA levels and rescued sgRNA activity, leading to increased templated repair. This work reveals a previously unappreciated role for ncRNA stability in retron editor efficiency in human cells and presents an enhanced Eco1 retron editor capable of precise genome editing in human cells from a single integrated lentivirus and, in the context of the nCas9 H840A nickase, without creating double-strand breaks.

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