Systematic discovery of natural CRISPR-Cas12a inhibitors

Kyle E. Watters(University of California, Berkeley), Christof Fellmann(Gladstone Institutes), Hua Bai(University of California, Berkeley), Shawn M. Ren(University of California, Berkeley), Jennifer A. Doudna(Gladstone Institutes)
Science
September 6, 2018
Cited by 207

Abstract

Cas12a (Cpf1) is a CRISPR-associated nuclease with broad utility for synthetic genome engineering, agricultural genomics, and biomedical applications. Although bacteria harboring CRISPR-Cas9 or CRISPR-Cas3 adaptive immune systems sometimes acquire mobile genetic elements encoding anti-CRISPR proteins that inhibit Cas9, Cas3, or the DNA-binding Cascade complex, no such inhibitors have been found for CRISPR-Cas12a. Here we use a comprehensive bioinformatic and experimental screening approach to identify three different inhibitors that block or diminish CRISPR-Cas12a-mediated genome editing in human cells. We also find a widespread connection between CRISPR self-targeting and inhibitor prevalence in prokaryotic genomes, suggesting a straightforward path to the discovery of many more anti-CRISPRs from the microbial world.


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