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M. Klein

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7 records found

Journal article (2023) - Misha Klein, Subhas C. Bera, Thomas K. Anderson, Bing Wang, Flavia S. Papini, Jamie J. Arnold, Craig E. Cameron, Martin Depken, David Dulin, More authors...
Journal article (2022) - Behrouz Eslami-Mossallam, Misha Klein, Constantijn V.D. Smagt, Koen V.D. Sanden, Stephen K. Jones, John A. Hawkins, Ilya J. Finkelstein, Martin Depken
The S. pyogenes (Sp) Cas9 endonuclease is an important gene-editing tool. SpCas9 is directed to target sites based on complementarity to a complexed single-guide RNA (sgRNA). However, SpCas9-sgRNA also binds and cleaves genomic off-targets with only partial complementarity. To date, we lack the ability to predict cleavage and binding activity quantitatively, and rely on binary classification schemes to identify strong off-targets. We report a quantitative kinetic model that captures the SpCas9-mediated strand-replacement reaction in free-energy terms. The model predicts binding and cleavage activity as a function of time, target, and experimental conditions. Trained and validated on high-throughput bulk-biochemical data, our model predicts the intermediate R-loop state recently observed in single-molecule experiments, as well as the associated conversion rates. Finally, we show that our quantitative activity predictor can be reduced to a binary off-target classifier that outperforms the established state-of-the-art. Our approach is extensible, and can characterize any CRISPR-Cas nuclease – benchmarking natural and future high-fidelity variants against SpCas9; elucidating determinants of CRISPR fidelity; and revealing pathways to increased specificity and efficiency in engineered systems. ...
Journal article (2019) - Thijs Cui, Misha Klein, Jorrit W. Hegge, Stanley D. Chandradoss, John van der Oost, Martin Depken, Chirlmin Joo
Argonaute (Ago) proteins are key players in both gene regulation (eukaryotes) and host defense (prokaryotes). Acting on single-stranded nucleic-acid substrates, Ago relies on base pairing between a small nucleic-acid guide and its complementary target sequences for specificity. To efficiently scan nucleic-acid chains for targets, Ago diffuses laterally along the substrate and must bypass secondary structures as well as protein barriers. Using single-molecule FRET in conjunction with kinetic modelling, we reveal that target scanning is mediated through loose protein-nucleic acid interactions, allowing Ago to slide short distances over secondary structures, as well as to bypass protein barriers via intersegmental transfer. Our combined single-molecule experiment and kinetic modelling approach may serve as a platform to dissect search processes and study the effect of sequence on search kinetics for other nucleic acid-guided proteins. ...

Modeling the search time and specificity of Cas9 and Argonaute

Doctoral thesis (2019) - Misha Klein
The past decade has witnessed a revolution in genome-engineering. Using CRISPR-Cas9 DNA sequences can be marked, detected and cleaved. Rewriting life’s instructions in such a fashion paves the way towards numerous scientific, agricultural and medical applications. Without proper quantfication of the associated risks we face the danger of applying treatments without knowing its consequences. Most notable concern lies in Cas9’s specificity. Although Cas9 targets DNA complementary to any designed 20nt guide RNA, it notoriously also acts on non-fully matching sequences. This thesis describes work towards a physical understanding of how Cas9 and similar RNA/DNA guided systems locate and recognize their target. Chapter 1 introduces the reader to life’s most important molecules (DNA, RNA and protein) as well as to the RNA guided CRISPR and Argonaute (Ago) systems. The chapter also provides an introduction to the main modeling techniques used in subsequent chapters. ...
Due to their specificity, efficiency, and ease of programming, CRISPR-associated nucleases are popular tools for genome editing. On the genomic scale, these nucleases still show considerable off-target activity though, posing a serious obstacle to the development of therapies. Off targeting is often minimized by choosing especially high-specificity guide sequences, based on algorithms that codify empirically determined off-targeting rules. A lack of mechanistic understanding of these rules has so far necessitated their ad hoc implementation, likely contributing to the limited precision of present algorithms. To understand the targeting rules, we kinetically model the physics of guide-target hybrid formation. Using only four parameters, our model elucidates the kinetic origin of the experimentally observed off-targeting rules, thereby rationalizing the results from both binding and cleavage assays. We favorably compare our model to published data from CRISPR-Cas9, CRISPR-Cpf1, CRISPR-Cascade, as well as the human Argonaute 2 system. ...
MicroRNA (miRNA) interferes with the translation of cognate messenger RNA (mRNA) by finding, preferentially binding, and marking it for degradation. To facilitate the search process, Argonaute (Ago) proteins come together with miRNA, forming a dynamic search complex. In this review we use the language of free-energy landscapes to discuss recent single-molecule and high-resolution structural data in the light of theoretical work appropriated from the study of transcription-factor search. We suggest that experimentally observed internal states of the Ago-miRNA search complex may have the explicit biological function of speeding up search while maintaining specificity. ...
Journal article (2016) - Tim Künne, Sebastian N. Kieper, Jasper W. Bannenberg, Anne I M Vogel, Willem R. Miellet, Misha Klein, Martin Depken, Maria Suarez-Diez, Stan J J Brouns
Prokaryotes use a mechanism called priming to update their CRISPR immunological memory to rapidly counter revisiting, mutated viruses, and plasmids. Here we have determined how new spacers are produced and selected for integration into the CRISPR array during priming. We show that Cas3 couples CRISPR interference to adaptation by producing DNA breakdown products that fuel the spacer integration process in a two-step, PAM-associated manner. The helicase-nuclease Cas3 pre-processes target DNA into fragments of about 30–100 nt enriched for thymine-stretches in their 3′ ends. The Cas1-2 complex further processes these fragments and integrates them sequence-specifically into CRISPR repeats by coupling of a 3′ cytosine of the fragment. Our results highlight that the selection of PAM-compliant spacers during priming is enhanced by the combined sequence specificities of Cas3 and the Cas1-2 complex, leading to an increased propensity of integrating functional CTT-containing spacers. ...