- Liu, Jun-Jie;
- Orlova, Natalia;
- Oakes, Benjamin L;
- Ma, Enbo;
- Spinner, Hannah B;
- Baney, Katherine LM;
- Chuck, Jonathan;
- Tan, Dan;
- Knott, Gavin J;
- Harrington, Lucas B;
- Al-Shayeb, Basem;
- Wagner, Alexander;
- Brötzmann, Julian;
- Staahl, Brett T;
- Taylor, Kian L;
- Desmarais, John;
- Nogales, Eva;
- Doudna, Jennifer A
The RNA-guided CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins Cas9 and Cas12a provide adaptive immunity against invading nucleic acids, and function as powerful tools for genome editing in a wide range of organisms. Here we reveal the underlying mechanisms of a third, fundamentally distinct RNA-guided genome-editing platform named CRISPR-CasX, which uses unique structures for programmable double-stranded DNA binding and cleavage. Biochemical and in vivo data demonstrate that CasX is active for Escherichia coli and human genome modification. Eight cryo-electron microscopy structures of CasX in different states of assembly with its guide RNA and double-stranded DNA substrates reveal an extensive RNA scaffold and a domain required for DNA unwinding. These data demonstrate how CasX activity arose through convergent evolution to establish an enzyme family that is functionally separate from both Cas9 and Cas12a.