Engineering TALE-linked deaminases to facilitate precision adenine base editing in mitochondrial DNA
Authors
Sung-Ik Cho ; Kayeong Lim ; Seongho Hong ; Jaesuk Lee ; Annie Kim ; Chae Jin Lim ; Seungmin Ryou ; Ji Min Lee ; Young Geun Mok ; Eugene Chung ; Sanghun Kim ; Seunghun Han ; Sang-Mi Cho ; Jieun Kim ; Eun-Kyoung Kim ; Ki-Hoan Nam ; Yeji Oh ; Minkyung Choi ; Tae Hyeon An ; Kyoung-Jin Oh ; Seonghyun Lee ; Hyunji Lee ; Jin-Soo Kim
DddA-derived cytosine base editors (DdCBEs) and transcription activator-like effector (TALE)-linked deaminases (TALEDs) catalyze targeted base editing of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in eukaryotic cells, a method useful for modeling of mitochondrial genetic disorders and developing novel therapeutic modalities. Here, we report that A-to-G-editing TALEDs but not C-to-T-editing DdCBEs induce tens of thousands of transcriptome-wide off-target edits in human cells. To avoid these unwanted RNA edits, we engineered the substrate-binding site in TadA8e, the deoxy-adenine deaminase in TALEDs, and created TALED variants with fine-tuned deaminase activity. Our engineered TALED variants not only reduced RNA off-target edits by >99% but also minimized off-target mtDNA mutations and bystander edits at a target site. Unlike wild-type versions, our TALED variants were not cytotoxic and did not cause developmental arrest of mouse embryos. As a result, we obtained mice with pathogenic mtDNA mutations, associated with Leigh syndrome, which showed reduced heart rates.