Abstract

The key component of the revolutionary Streptococcus pyogenes CRISPR/Cas genome editing technology is the multidomain protein Cas9. However, the specificity of wild type Cas9 is not sufficiently high for editing large genomes of higher eukaryotes, which limits the realization of the potential of genomic editing both in fundamental investigations and in the therapy of genetic diseases. The main way to obtain more specific variants of Cas9 is through mutagenesis followed by characterization of mutant proteins in in vitro or in vivo test systems. The in vitro and some in vivo test systems described in the literature are often labor-intensive and have scaling limitations, which makes it challenging to screen SpCas9 mutant variant libraries. In order to develop a simple method for high-throughput screening of Cas9 mutants in vivo, we characterized three test systems using CRISPR/Cas9-mediated inactivation of the reporter genes, tsPurple, ADE2, and URA3, in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast as a model subject. We measured the activities of high-precision forms of Cas9, evoCas9, and HiFiCas9, and compared them with the wild-type form. ADE2 gene inactivation was found to be the most valid method for the evaluation of Cas9 activity. In the test-system developed, the sensitivity to chromatin structure was demonstrated for the high-fidelity variant of Cas9, HiFiCas9. The proposed test-system can be used for the development of new generation genome editors.

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