학술논문

The Histone Chaperone FACT Induces Cas9 Multi-turnover Behavior and Modifies Genome Manipulation in Human Cells
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular Cell. 79(2)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological Sciences
Human Genome
Genetics
1.1 Normal biological development and functioning
Underpinning research
Generic health relevance
Animals
CRISPR-Associated Protein 9
CRISPR-Associated Proteins
Cell Line
DNA
DNA Breaks
Double-Stranded
DNA Repair
DNA-Binding Proteins
Epigenesis
Genetic
Gene Editing
Gene Knockdown Techniques
Genome
Human
High Mobility Group Proteins
Humans
Nucleosomes
Transcriptional Elongation Factors
Xenopus laevis
CRISPR
CRISPRa
CRISPRi
Cas9
FACT complex
SPT16
SSRP1
histone chaperone
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Cas9 is a prokaryotic RNA-guided DNA endonuclease that binds substrates tightly in vitro but turns over rapidly when used to manipulate genomes in eukaryotic cells. Little is known about the factors responsible for dislodging Cas9 or how they influence genome engineering. Unbiased detection through proximity labeling of transient protein interactions in cell-free Xenopus laevis egg extract identified the dimeric histone chaperone facilitates chromatin transcription (FACT) as an interactor of substrate-bound Cas9. FACT is both necessary and sufficient to displace dCas9, and FACT immunodepletion converts Cas9's activity from multi-turnover to single turnover. In human cells, FACT depletion extends dCas9 residence times, delays genome editing, and alters the balance between indel formation and homology-directed repair. FACT knockdown also increases epigenetic marking by dCas9-based transcriptional effectors with a concomitant enhancement of transcriptional modulation. FACT thus shapes the intrinsic cellular response to Cas9-based genome manipulation most likely by determining Cas9 residence times.