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Enhanced eMAGE applied to identify genetic factors of nuclear hormone receptor dysfunction via combinatorial gene editing
Research Highlights/2024.06.24

AbstractTechnologies that generate precise combinatorial genome modifications are well suited to dissect the polygenic basis of complex phenotypes and...

Abstract

Technologies that generate precise combinatorial genome modifications are well suited to dissect the polygenic basis of complex phenotypes and engineer synthetic genomes. Genome modifications with engineered nucleases can lead to undesirable repair outcomes through imprecise homology-directed repair, requiring non-cleavable gene editing strategies. Eukaryotic multiplex genome engineering (eMAGE) generates precise combinatorial genome modifications in Saccharomyces cerevisiae without generating DNA breaks or using engineered nucleases. Here, we systematically optimize eMAGE to achieve 90% editing frequency, reduce workflow time, and extend editing distance to 20 kb. We further engineer an inducible dominant negative mismatch repair system, allowing for high-efficiency editing via eMAGE while suppressing the elevated background mutation rate 17-fold resulting from mismatch repair inactivation. We apply these advances to construct a library of cancer-associated mutations in the ligand-binding domains of human estrogen receptor alpha and progesterone receptor to understand their impact on ligand-independent autoactivation. We validate that this yeast model captures autoactivation mutations characterized in human breast cancer models and further leads to the discovery of several previously uncharacterized autoactivating mutations. This work demonstrates the development and optimization of a cleavage-free method of genome editing well suited for applications requiring efficient multiplex editing with minimal background mutations.

Title

Enhanced eMAGE applied to identify genetic factors of nuclear hormone receptor dysfunction via combinatorial gene editing

Authors

Peter N. Ciaccia, Zhuobin Liang, Anabel Y. Schweitzer, Eli Metzner & Farren J. Isaacs

Journal Information

Nature Communications 15, 5218 (2024)

DOI

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49365-z

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