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Microfluidic tool for rapid functional characterization of CRISPR complexes

  • Dana Peleg-Chen
  • , Guy Shuvali
  • , Lev Brio
  • , Amit Ifrach
  • , Ortal Iancu
  • , Efrat Barbiro-Michaely
  • , Ayal Hendel*
  • , Doron Gerber
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

RNA guided nucleases are regarded as the future genome editing technologies. As such, they need to meet strong safety margins. Two major challenges in incorporating CRISPR technologies into the clinical world are off-target activity and editing efficiency. The common way to tackle such issues is to measure the binding and cleavage kinetics of the CRISPR enzyme. This can be challenging since, for example, DNA is not released from the CAS9 protein post cleavage. Here a promising new microfluidic approach to characterizing Enzymatic Interaction and Function of CRISPR complexes on a microfluidic platform (EnzyMIF) is presented. The method can rapidly detect the kd, koff, km and kcat for various RNA guided nucleases. In this work, two single guide RNAs with significantly different in-cell cleavage efficiency, RAG2 and RAG1, are used as proof-of-concept. The EnzyMIF assay results provide biochemical characterization of these guide RNAs that can explain the difference in cleavage using both wild type (WT) CAS9 and HiFi CAS9. Notably, it is shown that EnzyMIF characterization correlates with cell culture genomic editing efficiency results. It is suggested that EnzyMIF can predict the quality of cleavage rapidly and quantitatively.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1-8
Number of pages8
JournalNew Biotechnology
Volume68
DOIs
StatePublished - 25 May 2022
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022

Keywords

  • Association and dissociation rate
  • CRISPR editing
  • Enzymatic kinetic activity
  • HiFi CAS9

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