Dithiothreitol
Facilitates LbCas12a with Expanded
PAM Preference for Ultrasensitive Nucleic Acid Detection
Posted on 2025-03-15 - 19:03
Clustered
regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats-associated
(CRISPR/Cas) proteins have been used for a growing class of in vitro
molecular diagnostics due to their modularity and high specificity
in targeting nucleic acid. However, the requirement of a protospacer
adjacent motif (PAM) for Cas protein-catalyzed trans-cleavage poses
a challenge for random nucleic acid detection. Here, we demonstrate
that dithiothreitol (DTT) enables LbCas12a to adopt a relaxed preference
for PAM base pairing, thereby expanding the target sequence space.
Accordingly, we propose a DTT-mediated CRISPR/Cas12a toolbox (DTT-deCRISPR)
that exhibits relaxed PAM specificity and is readily compatible with
nucleic acid amplification techniques including recombinase polymerase
amplification (RPA) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). As a proof
of concept, we integrate DTT-deCRISPR with frequently used PCR for
sensitively and selectively detecting high-risk human papillomavirus
(HPV) 16 and 18. The platform demonstrates the ability to detect synthesized
HPV 16 and 18 plasmids down to 1 aM within 60 min. Based on the receiver
operating characteristic curve analysis, the clinical sensitivities
of the developed method for detecting HPV 16 and 18 are 93.75% and
80.00%, respectively. We further incorporate it into a lateral flow
assay (LFA) for point-of-care detection, and the HPV 16 and HPV 18
abundances determined by LFA for clinical samples are consistent with
the fluorescence analysis results. Together, this work uncovers an
unexpected connection between DTT and PAM preferences of LbCas12a,
promoting the universality and flexibility of CRISPR technology in
molecular diagnostics.