Making the cut

Researchers provide new insight into how an enzyme used in CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing technology cuts DNA.

Image credit: Marco Verch (trendingtopics) (CC BY 2.0)

The DNA inside human cells provides instructions for all of the processes that happen inside the body. Errors in the DNA may lead to cancer, sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis, Huntington’s disease, or other genetic disorders. Medical researchers are exploring whether it is possible to replace or repair the faulty DNA (an approach known as gene therapy) to reduce the symptoms, or even cure individuals, of these conditions.

Over the last ten years, a new technology known as CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing has proved to be a reliable and efficient way to make small and precise changes to DNA in living cells. First, an enzyme called Cas9 searches for a segment of target DNA segment that matches a template molecule the enzyme carries. Cas9 then cuts the target DNA, which is repaired to match a new customized DNA sequence: this changes the genetic information of the cell.

The Cas9 protein is made of a succession of building blocks called amino acids that create long chains which then fold to form the final three-dimensional shape of the enzyme. A region of Cas9 known as the HNH domain is responsible for cutting the target DNA. However, it remains unclear exactly which amino acids within this domain work together to sever the DNA.

Here, Zuo et al. combined computational and experimental approaches to reveal the three-dimensional structure of the Cas9 enzyme when the HNH domain is poised to cut the target DNA. The findings were used to generate a computational model of Cas9 and this model predicted that the HNH domain relies on a group of three amino acids known collectively as D839-H840-N863 to cleave DNA strands.

This knowledge is useful to understand exactly how Cas9 modifies genetic information. Ultimately, this may help to improve CRISPR-Cas9 technology so it could be safely used in geneediting therapies.