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In vitro transposon targeting using a catalytically inactive Cas9

Shivam Bhatt, +1 more
- 08 Mar 2019 - 
- pp 571653
TLDR
In this paper, the Hsmar1 transposase was fused to a catalytically inactive Cas9 to bias transposon insertions into the vicinity of the target site bound by a guide RNA-dCas9 ribonucleoprotein complex.
Abstract
Transposases are attractive tools for the integration of therapeutic transgenes into the chromosome for gene therapy applications. Typically, transgenes can be flanked with inverted-terminal repeat sequences, which are recognised by the transposase and integrated at random sites. Minimising detrimental insertions of transgenes is a key goal in the development of gene delivery vectors for gene therapy. We fused the Hsmar1 transposase to a catalytically inactive Cas9. Our aim was to bias transposon insertions into the vicinity of the target site bound by a guide RNA-dCas9 ribonucleoprotein complex. Although we could not detect any targeted transposition events in vivo, we achieved a 15-fold enrichment of transposon insertions into a 600-bp target site in an in vitro plasmid-to-plasmid assay. Additionally, we show that among those integrations that were successfully targeted, the location is tightly constrained to a site immediately to one side of the guide RNA target site. We present an in vitro proof-of-concept study demonstrating that the transposase insertion profile can be biased using a catalytically inactive Cas9 variant as a programmable DNA-binding module. One factor that limits the utility of this approach is that the transposon continues to integrate randomly. Although the dCas9 domain can be targeted to chromosomal lacZ, as evidenced by transcriptional repression, we were unable to detect any targeted insertions in the vicinity of the target site. Any targeted insertions that did occur were masked be a much larger number of random insertions. It is therefore necessary to develop a method for the temporal control of the transposase to allow Cas9 time to locate its target site.

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Genetic compensation induced by deleterious mutations but not gene knockdowns

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that egfl7 mutants do not show any obvious phenotypes while animals injected with egfl 7 morpholino (morphants) exhibit severe vascular defects, indicating that the activation of a compensatory network to buffer against deleterious mutations was not observed after translational or transcriptional knockdown.
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Excision of the Drosophila Mariner Transposon Mos1: Comparison with Bacterial Transposition and V(D)J Recombination.: Comparison with Bacterial Transposition and V(D)J Recombination.

Angela Dawson, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2003 - 
TL;DR: The mechanism by which mariner, a eukaryotic transposable element, performs DNA cleavage is examined and it is shown that the nontransferred strand is cleaved initially, unlike prokaryotictransposons which cleave the transferred strand first.
Posted ContentDOI

Drag-and-drop genome insertion without DNA cleavage with CRISPR-directed integrases

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present Programmable Addition via Site-specific Targeting Elements (PASTE), which achieves efficient and versatile gene integration at diverse loci by directing insertion with a CRISPR-Cas9 nickase fused to both a reverse transcriptase and serine integrase.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Manipulating piggyBac Transposon Chromosomal Integration Site Selection in Human Cells

TL;DR: This work fused a highly site-specific synthetic zinc-finger DNA-binding domain (ZFP) to the N-terminus of the piggyBac transposase and evaluated site-directed genomic integration in human cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transcription activator like effector (TALE)-directed piggyBac transposition in human cells

TL;DR: This work aimed to retarget transposon insertions by comparing a series of novel hyperactive piggyBac constructs tethered to a custom transcription activator like effector DNA-binding domain designed to bind the first intron of the human CCR5 gene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of cationic liposome formulations for intratracheal gene therapy of early lung cancer.

TL;DR: A novel liposome formulation (DP3) was found that was more effective than G67 in vitro and as effective as G67 at both preventing lung tumor growth and prolonging survival in the authors' lung cancer mouse model, and a positive correlation between the in vitro p53 function and the in vivo antitumoral activities of lipo-p53 formulations was observed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Retargeting transposon insertions by the adeno-associated virus Rep protein

TL;DR: A comparative insight into target site selection properties of transposons, as well as proof-of-principle for targeted chromosomal transposition by composite protein–protein and protein–DNA interactions are provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design of a nonviral vector for site-selective, efficient integration into the human genome

TL;DR: The use of a chimeric transposase to bypass the potential requirement of a host DNA‐directing factor (or factors) for efficient, site‐selective integration into the genome of mammalian cells is proposed.
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