Discovery and Engineering of a New BvCas12a Nuclease for Mammalian Genome Editing and Nucleic Acid Detection

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Abstract

Cas12a is an RNA-guided endonuclease that has emerged as a powerful gene-editing tool. We have identified a novel Cas protein, BvCas12a, from Butyricimonas virosa with a 5’-TYTN protospacer adjacent motif (PAM). BvCas12a exhibits double-stranded DNA cleavage activity in vitro and genome editing activity in eukaryotic cells. Though the editing efficiency of BvCas12a is marginally lower than that of AsCas12a, the editing specificity of BvCas12a in eukaryotic cells is comparable or superior to that of AsCas12a. Moreover, BvCas12a exhibits substantial collateral activity and can detect HPV DNA effectively and accurately in conjunction with isothermal amplification, highlighting its potential in nucleic acid diagnostics. Furthermore, we have engineered BvCas12a to create two variants, BvCas12a-R (N549R, T606P) and BvCas12a-RVR (N549R, K555V, C559R, T606P). These variants recognize expanded 5’-YYN and 5’-YN PAM in vitro , respectively. Additionally, they exhibit higher editing activity than wild-type BvCas12a and recognize 5’-YYN PAM in vivo at all sites detected. In conclusion, we have identified a novel BvCas12a protein with high specificity and engineered two variants with broader PAM compatibility and improved genome editing efficiency. These findings offer a potent gene editing tool for application in scientific research, gene therapy, and nucleic acid diagnostics.

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