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      Prediction of off-target activities for the end-to-end design of CRISPR guide RNAs

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          Abstract

          <p class="first" id="P1">The CRISPR-Cas9 system provides unprecedented genome editing capabilities. However, off-target effects lead to sub-optimal usage and additionally are a bottleneck in the development of therapeutic uses. Herein, we introduce the first machine learning-based approach to off-target prediction, yielding a state-of-the-art model for CRISPR-Cas9 that outperforms all other guide design services. Our approach, Elevation, consists of two interdependent machine learning models—one for scoring individual guide-target pairs, and another which aggregates these guide-target scores into a single, overall summary guide score. Through systematic investigation, we demonstrate that Elevation performs substantially better than competing approaches on both tasks. Additionally, we are the first to systematically evaluate approaches on the guide summary score problem; we show that the most widely-used method performs no better than random at times, whereas Elevation consistently outperformed it, sometimes by an order of magnitude. We also introduce an evaluation method that balances errors between active and inactive guides, thereby encapsulating a range of practical use cases; Elevation is consistently superior to other methods across the entire range. Finally, because of the large scale and computational demands of off-target prediction, we have developed a cloud-based service for quick retrieval. This service provides end-to-end guide design by also incorporating our previously reported on-target model, Azimuth. ( <a data-untrusted="" href="https://crispr.ml:please" id="d10886445e231" target="xrefwindow">https://crispr.ml:please</a> treat this web site as confidential until publication). </p>

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          Most cited references15

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          Stacked generalization

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            FLASH Assembly of TALENs Enables High-Throughput Genome Editing

            Engineered transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) have shown promise as facile and broadly applicable genome editing tools. However, no publicly available high-throughput method for constructing TALENs has been published and large-scale assessments of the success rate and targeting range of the technology remain lacking. Here we describe the Fast Ligation-based Automatable Solid-phase High-throughput (FLASH) platform, a rapid and cost-effective method we developed to enable large-scale assembly of TALENs. We tested 48 FLASH-assembled TALEN pairs in a human cell-based EGFP reporter system and found that all 48 possessed efficient gene modification activities. We also used FLASH to assemble TALENs for 96 endogenous human genes implicated in cancer and/or epigenetic regulation and found that 84 pairs were able to efficiently introduce targeted alterations. Our results establish the robustness of TALEN technology and demonstrate that FLASH facilitates high-throughput genome editing at a scale not currently possible with engineered zinc-finger nucleases or meganucleases.
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              Genome-wide analysis reveals specificities of Cpf1 endonucleases in human cells.

              Programmable clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) Cpf1 endonucleases are single-RNA-guided (crRNA) enzymes that recognize thymidine-rich protospacer-adjacent motif (PAM) sequences and produce cohesive double-stranded breaks (DSBs). Genome editing with CRISPR-Cpf1 endonucleases could provide an alternative to CRISPR-Cas9 endonucleases, but the determinants of targeting specificity are not well understood. Using mismatched crRNAs we found that Cpf1 could tolerate single or double mismatches in the 3' PAM-distal region, but not in the 5' PAM-proximal region. Genome-wide analysis of cleavage sites in vitro for eight Cpf1 nucleases using Digenome-seq revealed that there were 6 (LbCpf1) and 12 (AsCpf1) cleavage sites per crRNA in the human genome, fewer than are present for Cas9 nucleases (>90). Most Cpf1 off-target cleavage sites did not produce mutations in cells. We found mismatches in either the 3' PAM-distal region or in the PAM sequence of 12 off-target sites that were validated in vivo. Off-target effects were completely abrogated by using preassembled, recombinant Cpf1 ribonucleoproteins.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Nature Biomedical Engineering
                Nat Biomed Eng
                Springer Nature
                2157-846X
                January 2018
                January 10 2018
                : 2
                : 1
                : 38-47
                Article
                10.1038/s41551-017-0178-6
                6037314
                29998038
                ec015cb1-6c0f-4e67-bb55-4166c91f327f
                © 2018

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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