基因组编辑
基因组
机制(生物学)
计算生物学
基因组工程
生物
计算机科学
进化生物学
遗传学
哲学
基因
认识论
作者
Wayne Ngo,Julia Peukes,Alisha Baldwin,Zhiwei Xue,Sidney Hwang,Robert R. Stickels,Zhi Lin,Ansuman T. Satpathy,James A. Wells,Randy Schekman,Eva Nogales,Jennifer A. Doudna
标识
DOI:10.1101/2024.07.23.604809
摘要
The widespread application of genome editing to treat or even cure disease requires the delivery of genome editors into the nucleus of target cells. Enveloped Delivery Vehicles (EDVs) are engineered virally-derived particles capable of packaging and delivering CRISPR-Cas9 ribonucleoproteins (RNPs). However, the presence of lentiviral genome encapsulation and replication components in EDVs has obscured the underlying delivery mechanism and precluded particle optimization. Here we show that Cas9 RNP nuclear delivery is independent of the native lentiviral capsid structure. Instead, EDV-mediated genome editing activity corresponds directly to the number of nuclear localization sequences on the Cas9 enzyme. EDV structural analysis using cryo-electron tomography and small molecule inhibitors guided the removal of ~80% of viral residues, creating a minimal EDV (miniEDV) that retains full RNP delivery capability. MiniEDVs are 25% smaller yet package equivalent amounts of Cas9 RNPs relative to the original EDVs, and demonstrated increased editing in cell lines and therapeutically-relevant primary human T cells. These results show that virally-derived particles can be streamlined to create efficacious genome editing delivery vehicles that could simplify production and manufacturing.
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