RNA–protein analysis using a conditional CRISPR nuclease

Ho‐Young Lee(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), R.E. Haurwitz(Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology), Alex Apffel(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Kaihong Zhou(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Brian A. Smart(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Craig D. Wenger(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Stephen Laderman(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Laurakay Bruhn(Agilent Technologies (United States)), Jennifer A. Doudna(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
March 14, 2013
Cited by 104Open Access
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Abstract

RNA-binding proteins control the fate and function of the transcriptome in all cells. Here we present technology for isolating RNA-protein partners efficiently and accurately using an engineered clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) endoribonuclease. An inactive version of the Csy4 nuclease binds irreversibly to transcripts engineered with a 16-nt hairpin sequence at their 5' ends. Once immobilized by Csy4 on a solid support, contaminating proteins and other molecules can be removed by extensive washing. Upon addition of imidazole, Csy4 is activated to cleave the RNA, removing the hairpin tag and releasing the native transcript along with its specifically bound protein partners. This conditional Csy4 enzyme enables recovery of specific RNA-binding partners with minimal false-positive contamination. We use this method, coupled with quantitative MS, to identify cell type-specific human pre-microRNA-binding proteins. We also show that this technology is suitable for analyzing diverse size transcripts, and that it is suitable for adaptation to a high-throughput discovery format.


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