Abstract

The targeted deletion, replacement, integration, or inversion of genomic sequences could be used to study or treat human genetic diseases, but existing methods typically require double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) that lead to undesired consequences including uncontrolled indel mixtures and chromosomal abnormalities. Here, we describe twin prime editing (twinPE), a DSB-independent method that uses a prime editor (PE) protein and two prime editing guide RNAs (pegRNAs) for the programmable replacement or excision of DNA sequences at endogenous human genomic sites. The two pegRNAs template the synthesis of complementary DNA flaps on opposing strands of genomic DNA, which replace the endogenous DNA sequence between the PE-induced nick sites. When combined with a site-specific serine recombinase, twinPE enabled targeted integration of gene-sized DNA plasmids (>5,000 bp) and targeted sequence inversions of 40 kb in human cells. TwinPE expands the capabilities of precision gene editing and may synergize with other tools for the correction or complementation of large or complex human pathogenic alleles.

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