CRISPR/Cas9 inhibits rather than induces non-targeted DNA cleavage more
likely to cause off-target single-nucleotide variants
Abstract
CRISPR/Cas9 gene targeting technology has become the most widely used
gene editing technology in both plants and animals. However, substantial
off-target effect remains as a major imperfection hindering its further
application. Here, Nicotiana benthamiana leaf cell-free system was used
to simulate in vivo environment. And the effects of different
CRISPR/Cas9 components on DNA stability in cell-free system were studied
to explore possible mechanisms causing CRISPR off-target. The results
showed that overexpressing Cas9, nCas9 and dCas9 significantly inhibited
DNA cleavage in the cell extracts. While overexpressing RNPs accelerated
the target DNA cleavage but inhibited non-target DNA digestion in cell
extracts, overexpressing nRNP and dRNP blocked the cleavage of either
target or non-target sequences. Meanwhile, analysis of whole-genome
sequencing data from mice and rice edited by different CRISPR tools
revealed that the main off-target mutations were SNVs (single nucleotide
variants), rather than Indels (insertions and deletions) that were
readily induced by DNA double-strand breaks. The off-target sites did
not match the conventionally predicted places but were PAM-rich sites
preferred. Our study suggests that PAM-dependent binding without
cleavage of CRISPR/Cas9 to non-target sequences may increase off-target
mutation risks through impeding the necessary cleavage process for
repairing spontaneous or environmentally induced non-targeted DNA
mutations.