EMD-40444
WT CRISPR-Cas12a with a 15bp R-loop
EMD-40444
Single-particle3.3 Å

Map released: 03/07/2024
Last modified: 22/01/2025
Sample Organism:
synthetic construct,
Acidaminococcus sp. BV3L6
Sample: WT AsCas12a incubated with 16bp-complementary target DNA
Fitted models: 8sfl (Avg. Q-score: 0.381)
Deposition Authors: Strohkendl I
,
Taylor DW
Sample: WT AsCas12a incubated with 16bp-complementary target DNA
Fitted models: 8sfl (Avg. Q-score: 0.381)
Deposition Authors: Strohkendl I


Cas12a domain flexibility guides R-loop formation and forces RuvC resetting.
Strohkendl I
,
Saha A,
Moy C,
Nguyen AH,
Ahsan M,
Russell R,
Palermo G,
Taylor DW
(2024) Mol Cell , 84 , 2717 - 2731.e6


(2024) Mol Cell , 84 , 2717 - 2731.e6
Abstract:
The specific nature of CRISPR-Cas12a makes it a desirable RNA-guided endonuclease for biotechnology and therapeutic applications. To understand how R-loop formation within the compact Cas12a enables target recognition and nuclease activation, we used cryo-electron microscopy to capture wild-type Acidaminococcus sp. Cas12a R-loop intermediates and DNA delivery into the RuvC active site. Stages of Cas12a R-loop formation-starting from a 5-bp seed-are marked by distinct REC domain arrangements. Dramatic domain flexibility limits contacts until nearly complete R-loop formation, when the non-target strand is pulled across the RuvC nuclease and coordinated domain docking promotes efficient cleavage. Next, substantial domain movements enable target strand repositioning into the RuvC active site. Between cleavage events, the RuvC lid conformationally resets to occlude the active site, requiring re-activation. These snapshots build a structural model depicting Cas12a DNA targeting that rationalizes observed specificity and highlights mechanistic comparisons to other class 2 effectors.
The specific nature of CRISPR-Cas12a makes it a desirable RNA-guided endonuclease for biotechnology and therapeutic applications. To understand how R-loop formation within the compact Cas12a enables target recognition and nuclease activation, we used cryo-electron microscopy to capture wild-type Acidaminococcus sp. Cas12a R-loop intermediates and DNA delivery into the RuvC active site. Stages of Cas12a R-loop formation-starting from a 5-bp seed-are marked by distinct REC domain arrangements. Dramatic domain flexibility limits contacts until nearly complete R-loop formation, when the non-target strand is pulled across the RuvC nuclease and coordinated domain docking promotes efficient cleavage. Next, substantial domain movements enable target strand repositioning into the RuvC active site. Between cleavage events, the RuvC lid conformationally resets to occlude the active site, requiring re-activation. These snapshots build a structural model depicting Cas12a DNA targeting that rationalizes observed specificity and highlights mechanistic comparisons to other class 2 effectors.