Adenine base editor-mediated splicing remodeling activates noncanonical splice sites

Yuanyuan Liu,Qing Li,Tong Yan,Haoran Chen, Jiahua Wang,Yingyi Wang, Yeqin Yang,Lue Xiang,Zailong Chi, Kaiqun Ren,Bin Lin, Ge Lin,Jinsong Li,Yong Liu,Feng Gu

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY(2023)

引用 0|浏览12
暂无评分
摘要
Adenine base editors (ABEs) are genome-editing tools that have been harnessed to introduce precise A center dot T to G center dot C conversion. The discovery of split genes revealed that all introns contain two highly conserved dinucleotides, canonical "AG" (acceptor) and "GT" (donor) splice sites. ABE can directly edit splice acceptor sites of the adenine (A) base, leading to aberrant gene splicing, which may be further adopted to remodel splicing. However, spliced isoforms triggered with ABE have not been well explored. To address it, we initially generated a cell line harboring C -terminal enhanced GFP (eGFP)-tagged beta-actin (ACTB), in which the eGFP signal can track endogenous beta-actin expression. Expectedly, after the editing of splice acceptor sites, we observed a dramatical decrease in the percentage of eGFP-positive cells and generation of splicing products with the noncanonical splice site. Furthermore, we manipulated Peroxidasin in mouse embryos with ABE, in which a noncanonical acceptor was activated to remodel splicing, successfully generating a mouse disease model of anophthalmia and severely malformed microphthalmia. Collectively, we demonstrate that ABE-mediated splicing remodeling can activate a noncanonical acceptor to manipulate human and mouse genomes, which will facilitate the investigation of basic and translational medicine studies.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要