Abstract
Cytidine base editors, which are composed of a cytidine deaminase fused to clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)-associated protein 9 (Cas9) nickase, enable the efficient conversion of the C·G base pair to T·A in various organisms. However, the currently used rat apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide 1(rA1)-based BE3 is often inefficient in target Cs that are immediately downstream of a G (GC context). Here, we observed that, with an 11-nt editing window, an optimized activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID)-Cas9 fusion can efficiently convert C to T in a variety of sequence contexts in rabbits. Strikingly, the enhanced AID-Cas9 fusion (eAID-BE4max) has significant effectiveness of inducing Tyr p.R299H mutation in GC contexts (from 16.67 to 83.33%) in comparison with BE3 in founder rabbits. Furthermore, the engineered AID-Cas9 variants were produced with reduced bystander activity [eAID (N51G)-BE4max] and increased genome-targeting scope (eAID-NG-BE4max). Overall, this work provides a series of improved tools that were generated using optimized AID-Cas9 fusions and associated engineered variants that can be used for efficient and versatile C-to-T base editing, especially in GC contexts.-Liu, Z., Shan, H., Chen, S., Chen, M., Zhang, Q., Lai, L., Li, Z. Improved base editor for efficient editing in GC contexts in rabbits with an optimized AID-Cas9 fusion.
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