Exonuclease-enhanced prime editors

Dong‐Jiunn Jeffery Truong(Technical University of Munich), Julian Geilenkeuser(Technical University of Munich), Stephanie Victoria Wendel(Technical University of Munich), Julius Clemens Heinrich Wilming(Technical University of Munich), Niklas Armbrust(Technical University of Munich), E. Binder(Technical University of Munich), Tobias Heinrich Santl(Technical University of Munich), Annika Siebenhaar(Technical University of Munich), Christoph Gruber(Helmholtz Zentrum München), Teeradon Phlairaharn(Technical University of Munich), Milica Živanić(Technical University of Munich), Gil G. Westmeyer(Helmholtz Zentrum München)
Nature Methods
February 1, 2024
Cited by 33Open Access
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Abstract

Prime editing (PE) is a powerful gene-editing technique based on targeted gRNA-templated reverse transcription and integration of the de novo synthesized single-stranded DNA. To circumvent one of the main bottlenecks of the method, the competition of the reverse-transcribed 3' flap with the original 5' flap DNA, we generated an enhanced fluorescence-activated cell sorting reporter cell line to develop an exonuclease-enhanced PE strategy ('Exo-PE') composed of an improved PE complex and an aptamer-recruited DNA-exonuclease to remove the 5' original DNA flap. Exo-PE achieved better overall editing efficacy than the reference PE2 strategy for insertions ≥30 base pairs in several endogenous loci and cell lines while maintaining the high editing precision of PE2. By enabling the precise incorporation of larger insertions, Exo-PE complements the growing palette of different PE tools and spurs additional refinements of the PE machinery.


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