Helical transition of the bridge helix of Cas12a is an allosteric regulator of R-loop formation and RuvC activation
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CRISPR-Cas12a is widely used for genome editing and biomarker detection since it can create targeted double-stranded DNA breaks and promote non-specific DNA cleavage after identifying specific DNA. To mitigate the off-target DNA cleavage of Cas12a, we previously developed a Francisella novicida Cas12a variant (FnoCas12a KD2P ) by introducing double proline substitutions (K969P/D970P) in a conserved helix called the bridge helix (BH). In this work, we used cryogenic electron microscopy (cryoEM) to understand the molecular mechanisms of BH- mediated activation of Cas12a. We captured five structures of FnoCas12a KD2P at different states of conformational activation. Comparison with wild-type (FnoCas12a WT ) structures unravels a mechanism where BH acts as a trigger that allosterically activates REC lobe movements by tracking the number of base pairs in the growing RNA-DNA hybrid to undergo a loop-to-helical transition and bending to latch onto the hybrid. The transition of the BH is coupled to the previously reported loop-to-helix transition of the “lid”, essential for opening RuvC endonuclease, through direct interactions of residues of the BH and the lid. We also observe structural details of cooperativity of BH and “helix-1” of RuvC for activation, a previously proposed interaction. Overall, our study enables development of high-fidelity Cas12a and Cas9 variants by BH-modifications.