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Dive into the research topics where John Paul Guilinger is active.

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Featured researches published by John Paul Guilinger.


Nature Biotechnology | 2013

High-throughput profiling of off-target DNA cleavage reveals RNA-programmed Cas9 nuclease specificity

Vikram Pattanayak; Steven Lin; John Paul Guilinger; Enbo Ma; Jennifer A. Doudna; David R. Liu

The RNA-programmable Cas9 endonuclease cleaves double-stranded DNA at sites complementary to a 20-base-pair guide RNA. The Cas9 system has been used to modify genomes in multiple cells and organisms, demonstrating its potential as a facile genome-engineering tool. We used in vitro selection and high-throughput sequencing to determine the propensity of eight guide-RNA:Cas9 complexes to cleave each of 1012 potential off-target DNA sequences. The selection results predicted five off-target sites in the human genome that were confirmed to undergo genome cleavage in HEK293T cells upon expression of one of two guide-RNA:Cas9 complexes. In contrast to previous models, our results show that guide-RNA:Cas9 specificity extends past a 7- to 12-base-pair seed sequence. Our results also suggest a tradeoff between activity and specificity both in vitro and in cells as a shorter, less-active guide RNA is more specific than a longer, more-active guide RNA. High concentrations of guide-RNA:Cas9 complexes can cleave off-target sites containing mutations near or within the PAM that are not cleaved when enzyme concentrations are limiting.


Nature Biotechnology | 2015

Cationic lipid-mediated delivery of proteins enables efficient protein-based genome editing in vitro and in vivo

John A Zuris; David B. Thompson; Yilai Shu; John Paul Guilinger; Jeffrey L. Bessen; Johnny H. Hu; Morgan L. Maeder; J. Keith Joung; Zheng-Yi Chen; David R. Liu

Efficient intracellular delivery of proteins is needed to fully realize the potential of protein therapeutics. Current methods of protein delivery commonly suffer from low tolerance for serum, poor endosomal escape and limited in vivo efficacy. Here we report that common cationic lipid nucleic acid transfection reagents can potently deliver proteins that are fused to negatively supercharged proteins, that contain natural anionic domains or that natively bind to anionic nucleic acids. This approach mediates the potent delivery of nM concentrations of Cre recombinase, TALE- and Cas9-based transcription activators, and Cas9:sgRNA nuclease complexes into cultured human cells in media containing 10% serum. Delivery of unmodified Cas9:sgRNA complexes resulted in up to 80% genome modification with substantially higher specificity compared to DNA transfection. This approach also mediated efficient delivery of Cre recombinase and Cas9:sgRNA complexes into the mouse inner ear in vivo, achieving 90% Cre-mediated recombination and 20% Cas9-mediated genome modification in hair cells.Efficient intracellular delivery of proteins is needed to fully realize the potential of protein therapeutics. Current methods of protein delivery commonly suffer from low tolerance for serum, poor endosomal escape, and limited in vivo efficacy. Here we report that common cationic lipid nucleic acid transfection reagents can potently deliver proteins that are fused to negatively supercharged proteins, that contain natural anionic domains, or that natively bind to anionic nucleic acids. This approach mediates the potent delivery of nM concentrations of Cre recombinase, TALE- and Cas9-based transcriptional activators, and Cas9:sgRNA nuclease complexes into cultured human cells in media containing 10% serum. Delivery of Cas9:sgRNA complexes resulted in up to 80% genome modification with substantially higher specificity compared to DNA transfection. This approach also mediated efficient delivery of Cre recombinase and Cas9:sgRNA complexes into the mouse inner ear in vivo, achieving 90% Cre-mediated recombination and 20% Cas9-mediated genome modification in hair cells.


Nature Methods | 2014

Broad specificity profiling of TALENs results in engineered nucleases with improved DNA-cleavage specificity

John Paul Guilinger; Vikram Pattanayak; Deepak Reyon; Shengdar Q. Tsai; Jeffry D. Sander; J. Keith Joung; David R. Liu

Although transcription activator–like effector nucleases (TALENs) can be designed to cleave chosen DNA sequences, TALENs have activity against related off-target sequences. To better understand TALEN specificity, we profiled 30 unique TALENs with different target sites, array length and domain sequences for their abilities to cleave any of 1012 potential off-target DNA sequences using in vitro selection and high-throughput sequencing. Computational analysis of the selection results predicted 76 off-target substrates in the human genome, 16 of which were accessible and modified by TALENs in human cells. The results suggest that (i) TALE repeats bind DNA relatively independently; (ii) longer TALENs are more tolerant of mismatches yet are more specific in a genomic context; and (iii) excessive DNA-binding energy can lead to reduced TALEN specificity in cells. Based on these findings, we engineered a TALEN variant that exhibits equal on-target cleavage activity but tenfold lower average off-target activity in human cells.


Methods in Enzymology | 2014

Determining the Specificities of TALENs, Cas9, and Other Genome-Editing Enzymes

Vikram Pattanayak; John Paul Guilinger; David R. Liu

The rapid development of programmable site-specific endonucleases has led to a dramatic increase in genome engineering activities for research and therapeutic purposes. Specific loci of interest in the genomes of a wide range of organisms including mammals can now be modified using zinc-finger nucleases, transcription activator-like effectornucleases, and CRISPR-associated Cas9 endonucleases in a site-specific manner, in some cases requiring relatively modest effort for endonuclease design, construction, and application. While these technologies have made genome engineering widely accessible, the ability of programmable nucleases to cleave off-target sequences can limit their applicability and raise concerns about therapeutic safety. In this chapter, we review methods to evaluate and improve the DNA cleavage activity of programmable site-specific endonucleases and describe a procedure for a comprehensive off-target profiling method based on the in vitro selection of very large (~10(12)-membered) libraries of potential nuclease substrates.


Nature Methods | 2015

Continuous directed evolution of DNA-binding proteins to improve TALEN specificity.

Basil P Hubbard; Ahmed H. Badran; John A Zuris; John Paul Guilinger; Kevin Davis; Liwei Chen; Shengdar Q. Tsai; Jeffry D. Sander; J. Keith Joung; David R. Liu

Nucleases containing programmable DNA-binding domains can alter the genomes of model organisms and have the potential to become human therapeutics. Here we present DNA-binding phage-assisted continuous evolution (DB-PACE) as a general approach for the laboratory evolution of DNA-binding activity and specificity. We used this system to generate transcription activator–like effectors nucleases (TALENs) with broadly improved DNA cleavage specificity, establishing DB-PACE as a versatile approach for improving the accuracy of genome-editing agents.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2014

Electrophilic activity-based RNA probes reveal a self-alkylating RNA for RNA labeling

Richard Mcdonald; John Paul Guilinger; Shankar Mukherji; Edward A. Curtis; Won I. Lee; David R. Liu

Probes that form covalent bonds with RNA molecules based on their chemical reactivity would advance our ability to study the transcriptome. We developed a set of electrophilic activity-based RNA probes designed to react with unusually nucleophilic RNAs. We used these probes to identify reactive genome-encoded RNAs, resulting in the discovery of a 42-nt catalytic RNA from an archaebacterium that reacts with a 2,3-disubstituted epoxide at N7 of a specific guanosine. Detailed characterization of the catalytic RNA revealed the structural requirements for reactivity. We developed this catalytic RNA into a general tool to selectively conjugate a small molecule to an RNA of interest. This strategy enabled up to 500-fold enrichment of target RNA from total mammalian RNA or from cell lysate. We demonstrated the utility of this approach by selectively capturing proteins in yeast cell lysate that bind to the ASH1 mRNA.


Nature Biotechnology | 2014

Fusion of catalytically inactive Cas9 to FokI nuclease improves the specificity of genome modification.

John Paul Guilinger; David B. Thompson; David R. Liu


Archive | 2014

CAS9-FOKI FUSION PROTEINS AND USES THEREOF

David R. Liu; John Paul Guilinger; David B. Thompson


Archive | 2014

Cas9 variants and uses thereof

David R. Liu; John Paul Guilinger; David B. Thompson


Archive | 2014

CAS9-RECOMBINASE FUSION PROTEINS AND USES THEREOF

David R. Liu; John Paul Guilinger; David B. Thompson

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Edward A. Curtis

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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