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Diqiu Ren

Bio: Diqiu Ren is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Enhancer & IRF8. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications receiving 3 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discover and characterize the mechanism by which the chromatin "reader" ZMYND8 directly activates IRF8 in parallel with the MYC proto-oncogene through their lineage-specific enhancers.

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Split-engineered base editors (seBEs) as discussed by the authors enable small-molecule control over targeted mutator activity, which facilitates robust regulated editing with BE scaffolds containing diverse deaminases, offering a generalizable solution for temporally controlling precision genome editing.
Abstract: DNA deaminase enzymes play key roles in immunity and have recently been harnessed for their biotechnological applications. In base editors (BEs), the combination of DNA deaminase mutator activity with CRISPR-Cas localization confers the powerful ability to directly convert one target DNA base into another. While efforts have been made to improve targeting efficiency and precision, all BEs so far use a constitutively active DNA deaminase. The absence of regulatory control over promiscuous deaminase activity remains a major limitation to accessing the widespread potential of BEs. Here, we reveal sites that permit splitting of DNA cytosine deaminases into two inactive fragments, whose reapproximation reconstitutes activity. These findings allow for the development of split-engineered BEs (seBEs), which newly enable small-molecule control over targeted mutator activity. We show that the seBE strategy facilitates robust regulated editing with BE scaffolds containing diverse deaminases, offering a generalizable solution for temporally controlling precision genome editing.

16 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the TadA-derived cytosine base editors (TadCBEs) offer similar or higher on-target activity, smaller size and substantially lower Cas-independent DNA and RNA off-target editing activity.
Abstract: Cytosine base editors (CBEs) are larger and can suffer from higher off-target activity or lower on-target editing efficiency than current adenine base editors (ABEs). To develop a CBE that retains the small size, low off-target activity and high on-target activity of current ABEs, we evolved the highly active deoxyadenosine deaminase TadA-8e to perform cytidine deamination using phage-assisted continuous evolution. Evolved TadA cytidine deaminases contain mutations at DNA-binding residues that alter enzyme selectivity to strongly favor deoxycytidine over deoxyadenosine deamination. Compared to commonly used CBEs, TadA-derived cytosine base editors (TadCBEs) offer similar or higher on-target activity, smaller size and substantially lower Cas-independent DNA and RNA off-target editing activity. We also identified a TadA dual base editor (TadDE) that performs equally efficient cytosine and adenine base editing. TadCBEs support single or multiplexed base editing at therapeutically relevant genomic loci in primary human T cells and primary human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. TadCBEs expand the utility of CBEs for precision gene editing.

29 citations

Posted ContentDOI
28 Nov 2021-bioRxiv
TL;DR: The authors combined pooled CRISPR/Cas9-based functional screening of 5,072 fitness-conferring genes in human cells with microscopy-based visualization of DNA, DNA damage, actin, and microtubules.
Abstract: Understanding the basis for cellular growth, proliferation, and function requires determining the contributions of essential genes to diverse cellular processes. Here, we combined pooled CRISPR/Cas9-based functional screening of 5,072 fitness-conferring genes in human cells with microscopy-based visualization of DNA, DNA damage, actin, and microtubules. Analysis of >31 million individual cells revealed measurable phenotypes for >90% of genes. Using multi-dimensional clustering based on hundreds of quantitative phenotypic parameters, we identified co-functional genes across diverse cellular activities, revealing novel gene functions and associations. Pooled live-cell screening of [~]450,000 cell division events for 239 genes further identified functional contributions to chromosome segregation. Our work creates a resource for the phenotypic analysis of core cellular processes and defines the functional landscape of essential human genes.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , a widely-applicable genome engineering toolset for Gram-negative bacteria is presented, which enables single-nucleotide resolution manipulations (C·G → T·A) with +gt;90% efficiency.
Abstract: Abstract CRISPR/Cas technologies constitute a powerful tool for genome engineering, yet their use in non-traditional bacteria depends on host factors or exogenous recombinases, which limits both efficiency and throughput. Here we mitigate these practical constraints by developing a widely-applicable genome engineering toolset for Gram-negative bacteria. The challenge is addressed by tailoring a CRISPR base editor that enables single-nucleotide resolution manipulations (C·G → T·A) with >90% efficiency. Furthermore, incorporating Cas6-mediated processing of guide RNAs in a streamlined protocol for plasmid assembly supports multiplex base editing with >85% efficiency. The toolset is adopted to construct and deconstruct complex phenotypes in the soil bacterium Pseudomonas putida . Single-step engineering of an aromatic-compound production phenotype and multi-step deconstruction of the intricate redox metabolism illustrate the versatility of multiplex base editing afforded by our toolbox. Hence, this approach overcomes typical limitations of previous technologies and empowers engineering programs in Gram-negative bacteria that were out of reach thus far.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2022-Cell
TL;DR: In this article , the authors combined pooled CRISPR-Cas9-based functional screening of 5,072 fitness-conferring genes in human HeLa cells with microscopy-based imaging of DNA, the DNA damage response, actin, and microtubules.

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors identified the transcription factors MEF2D and IRF8 as selective transcriptional dependencies of KMT2A-rearranged acute myeloid leukemia.
Abstract: Acute myeloid leukemia with KMT2A (MLL) rearrangements is characterized by specific patterns of gene expression and enhancer architecture, implying unique core transcriptional regulatory circuitry. Here, we identified the transcription factors MEF2D and IRF8 as selective transcriptional dependencies of KMT2A-rearranged AML, where MEF2D displays partially redundant functions with its paralog, MEF2C. Rapid transcription factor degradation followed by measurements of genome-wide transcription rates and superresolution microscopy revealed that MEF2D and IRF8 form a distinct core regulatory module with a narrow direct transcriptional program that includes activation of the key oncogenes MYC, HOXA9, and BCL2. Our study illustrates a mechanism of context-specific transcriptional addiction whereby a specific AML subclass depends on a highly specialized core regulatory module to directly enforce expression of common leukemia oncogenes.

8 citations