Abstract

Microsatellites are short tandem repeats, ubiquitous in all eukaryotes and represent ~2% of the human genome. Among them, trinucleotide repeats are responsible for more than two dozen neurological and developmental disorders. Targeting microsatellites with dedicated DNA endonucleases could become a viable option for patients affected with dramatic neurodegenerative disorders. Here, we used the Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 to induce a double-strand break within the expanded CTG repeat involved in myotonic dystrophy type 1, integrated in a yeast chromosome. Repair of this double-strand break generated unexpected large chromosomal deletions around the repeat tract. These deletions depended on RAD50, RAD52, DNL4 and SAE2, and both non-homologous end-joining and single-strand annealing pathways were involved. Resection and repair of the double-strand break (DSB) were totally abolished in a rad50Δ strain, whereas they were impaired in a sae2Δ mutant, only on the DSB end containing most of the repeat tract. This observation demonstrates that Sae2 plays significant different roles in resecting a DSB end containing a repeated and structured sequence as compared to a non-repeated DSB end. In addition, we also discovered that gene conversion was less efficient when the DSB could be repaired using a homologous template, suggesting that the trinucleotide repeat may interfere with gene conversion too. Altogether, these data show that SpCas9 may not be the best choice when inducing a double-strand break at or near a microsatellite, especially in mammalian genomes that contain many more dispersed repeated elements than the yeast genome.

Highlights

  • Microsatellites are short tandem repeats ubiquitously found in all eukaryotic genomes sequenced so far [1]

  • Prone to frequent repeat length polymorphism, some microsatellites are prone to large expansions that lead to human neurological or developmental disorders, such as trinucleotide repeats involved in Huntington disease, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (Steinert disease), fragile X syndrome or Friedreich ataxia [3]

  • We discovered that gene conversion was less efficient when Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 nuclease (SpCas9) was used to induce a double-strand break (DSB) within a containing a (CTG) repeat tract that could be repaired with a homologous template, suggesting that the trinucleotide repeat may interfere with gene conversion too

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Summary

Introduction

Microsatellites are short tandem repeats ubiquitously found in all eukaryotic genomes sequenced so far [1]. Prone to frequent repeat length polymorphism, some microsatellites are prone to large expansions that lead to human neurological or developmental disorders, such as trinucleotide repeats involved in Huntington disease, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (Steinert disease), fragile X syndrome or Friedreich ataxia [3]. These expansion-prone microsatellites share the common property to form secondary DNA structures in vitro [4] and genetic evidence suggest that similar structures may form in vivo [5,6], transiently stalling replication fork progression [7,8,9,10,11]. Microsatellite abundance and the natural fragility of some of them make these repeated sequences perfect targets to generate chromosomal rearrangements potentially leading to cancer

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