Author
Listed:
- Junhong Choi
(University of Washington
Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
- Wei Chen
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Anna Minkina
(University of Washington)
- Florence M. Chardon
(University of Washington)
- Chase C. Suiter
(University of Washington
University of Washington)
- Samuel G. Regalado
(University of Washington)
- Silvia Domcke
(University of Washington)
- Nobuhiko Hamazaki
(University of Washington
Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
- Choli Lee
(University of Washington)
- Beth Martin
(University of Washington)
- Riza M. Daza
(University of Washington)
- Jay Shendure
(University of Washington
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Brotman Baty Institute for Precision Medicine
Allen Discovery Center for Cell Lineage Tracing)
Abstract
DNA is naturally well suited to serve as a digital medium for in vivo molecular recording. However, contemporary DNA-based memory devices are constrained in terms of the number of distinct ‘symbols’ that can be concurrently recorded and/or by a failure to capture the order in which events occur1. Here we describe DNA Typewriter, a general system for in vivo molecular recording that overcomes these and other limitations. For DNA Typewriter, the blank recording medium (‘DNA Tape’) consists of a tandem array of partial CRISPR–Cas9 target sites, with all but the first site truncated at their 5′ ends and therefore inactive. Short insertional edits serve as symbols that record the identity of the prime editing guide RNA2 mediating the edit while also shifting the position of the ‘type guide’ by one unit along the DNA Tape, that is, sequential genome editing. In this proof of concept of DNA Typewriter, we demonstrate recording and decoding of thousands of symbols, complex event histories and short text messages; evaluate the performance of dozens of orthogonal tapes; and construct ‘long tape’ potentially capable of recording as many as 20 serial events. Finally, we leverage DNA Typewriter in conjunction with single-cell RNA-seq to reconstruct a monophyletic lineage of 3,257 cells and find that the Poisson-like accumulation of sequential edits to multicopy DNA tape can be maintained across at least 20 generations and 25 days of in vitro clonal expansion.
Suggested Citation
Junhong Choi & Wei Chen & Anna Minkina & Florence M. Chardon & Chase C. Suiter & Samuel G. Regalado & Silvia Domcke & Nobuhiko Hamazaki & Choli Lee & Beth Martin & Riza M. Daza & Jay Shendure, 2022.
"A time-resolved, multi-symbol molecular recorder via sequential genome editing,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 608(7921), pages 98-107, August.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:608:y:2022:i:7921:d:10.1038_s41586-022-04922-8
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04922-8
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