FnCpf1: a novel and efficient genome editing tool for Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Journal Article (2017)
Author(s)

Michal A. Swiat (TU Delft - BT/Industriele Microbiologie)

Sofia Dashko (TU Delft - BT/Industriele Microbiologie)

M.J. den Ridder (Student TU Delft)

Melanie Wijsman (TU Delft - BT/Industriele Microbiologie)

John van der Oost (Wageningen University & Research)

J-M. Daran (TU Delft - BT/Industriele Microbiologie)

P. Daran-Lapujade (TU Delft - BT/Industriele Microbiologie)

Research Group
BT/Industriele Microbiologie
Copyright
© 2017 M.A. Swiat, S. Dashko, M.J. den Ridder, M. Wijsman, John van der Oost, J.G. Daran, P.A.S. Daran-Lapujade
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkx1007
More Info
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Publication Year
2017
Language
English
Copyright
© 2017 M.A. Swiat, S. Dashko, M.J. den Ridder, M. Wijsman, John van der Oost, J.G. Daran, P.A.S. Daran-Lapujade
Research Group
BT/Industriele Microbiologie
Issue number
21
Volume number
45
Pages (from-to)
12585-12598
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Cpf1 is a new class II family of CRISPR-Cas RNA-programmable endonucleases with unique features that make it a very attractive alternative or complement to Cas9 for genome engineering. Using constitutively expressed Cpf1 from Francisella novicida, the present study demonstrates that FnCpf1 can mediate RNA-guided DNA cleavage at targeted genomic loci in the popular model and industrial yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. FnCpf1 very efficiently and precisely promoted repair DNA recombination with efficiencies up to 100%. Furthermore, FnCpf1 was shown to introduce point mutations with high fidelity. While editing multiple loci with Cas9 is hampered by the need for multiple or complex expression constructs, processing itself a customized CRISPR array FnCpf1 was able to edit four genes simultaneously in yeast with a 100% efficiency. A remarkable observation was the unexpected, strong preference of FnCpf1 to cleave DNA at target sites harbouring 5'-TTTV-3' PAM sequences, a motif reported to be favoured by Cpf1 homologs of Acidaminococcus and Lachnospiraceae. The present study supplies several experimentally tested guidelines for crRNA design, as well as plasmids for FnCpf1 expression and easy construction of crRNA expression cassettes in S. cerevisiae. FnCpf1 proves to be a powerful addition to S. cerevisiae CRISPR toolbox.