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Resection and repair of a Cas9 double-strand break at CTG trinucleotide repeats induces local and extensive chromosomal deletions

Abstract

Microsatellites are short tandem repeats, ubiquitous in all eukaryotes and represent ~2% of the human genome. Among them, trinucleotide repeats are responsible for more than two dozen neurological and developmental disorders. Targeting microsatellites with dedicated DNA endonucleases could become a viable option for patients affected with dramatic neurodegenerative disorders. Here, we used the Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 to induce a double-strand break within the expanded CTG repeat involved in myotonic dystrophy type 1, integrated in a yeast chromosome. Repair of this double-strand break generated unexpected large chromosomal deletions around the repeat tract. These deletions depended on RAD50, RAD52, DNL4 and SAE2, and both non-homologous end-joining and single-strand annealing pathways were involved. Resection and repair of the double-strand break (DSB) were totally abolished in a rad50Δ strain, whereas they were impaired in a sae2Δ mutant, only on the DSB end containing most of the repeat tract. This observation demonstrates that Sae2 plays significant different roles in resecting a DSB end containing a repeated and structured sequence as compared to a non-repeated DSB end. In addition, we also discovered that gene conversion was less efficient when the DSB could be repaired using a homologous template, suggesting that the trinucleotide repeat may interfere with gene conversion too. Altogether, these data show that SpCas9 may not be the best choice when inducing a double-strand break at or near a microsatellite, especially in mammalian genomes that contain many more dispersed repeated elements than the yeast genome.

Author summary

With the discovery of highly specific DNA endonucleases such as TALEN and CRISPR-Cas systems, gene editing has become an attractive approach to address genetic disorders. Myotonic dystrophy type 1 (Steinert disease) is due to a large expansion of a CTG trinucleotide repeat in the DMPK gene. At the present time, despite numerous therapeutic attempts, this dramatic neurodegenerative disorder still has no cure. In the present work, we tried to use the Cas9 endonuclease to induce a double-strand break within the expanded CTG repeat of the DMPK gene integrated in the yeast genome. Surprisingly, this break induced chromosomal deletions around the repeat tract. These deletions were local and involved non-homologous joining of the two DNA ends, or more extensive involving homologous recombination between repeated elements upstream and downstream the break. Using yeast genetics, we investigated the genetic requirements for these deletions and found that the triplet repeat tract altered the capacity of the repair machinery to faithfully repair the double-strand break. These results have implications for future gene therapy approaches in human patients.

Introduction

Microsatellites are short tandem repeats ubiquitously found in all eukaryotic genomes sequenced so far [1]. Altogether, they cover ~2% of the human genome, a figure similar to the whole protein-coding sequence [2]. Naturally prone to frequent repeat length polymorphism, some microsatellites are also prone to large expansions that lead to human neurological or developmental disorders, such as trinucleotide repeats involved in Huntington disease, myotonic dystrophy type 1 (Steinert disease), fragile X syndrome or Friedreich ataxia [3]. These expansion-prone microsatellites share the common property to form secondary DNA structures in vitro [4] and genetic evidence suggest that similar structures may also form in vivo [5,6], transiently stalling replication fork progression [711]. Among those, CCG/CGG trinucleotide repeats are fragile sites in human cells, forming frequent double-strand breaks when the replication machinery is slowed down or impaired [12]. Similarly, CAG/CTG and CCG/CGG microsatellites are also fragile sites in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells [13,14]. Therefore, microsatellite abundance and the natural fragility of some of them make these repeated sequences perfect targets to generate chromosomal rearrangements potentially leading to cancer.

Double-strand break (DSB) repair mechanisms have been studied for decades in model organisms as well as in human cells and led to the identification of the main genes involved in this process [15]. Many of these advances were made possible by the use of highly specific DNA endonucleases, such as the meganucleases I-SceI or HO [1618]. Other frequently used methods involved ionizing radiation making genome-wide DSBs [19]. However, the fate of a single double-strand break within a repeated and structured DNA sequence has never been addressed, until recently. In a former work, we used a TALE Nuclease (TALEN) to induce a unique DSB into a long CTG trinucleotide repeat integrated into a S. cerevisiae chromosome. TALEN are made of the fusion between a Transcription Activator-like Effector, a Xanthomonas family of modular transcription activators (TALE), and the FokI nuclease domain. We showed that 100% of yeast cells in which the TALEN was expressed exhibited a large contraction of the repeat tract, going from an initial length of ~80 CTG triplets to less than 35. POL32, DNL4 and RAD51 were shown to play no detectable role in repairing this DSB. On the contrary, RAD50, RAD52 and SAE2 were required for proper repair of the DSB, and a functional Sae2 protein was found to be essential for efficient DSB resection, suggesting that repeat contraction occurred by a single-strand annealing (SSA) process, involving preliminary resection of the break, followed by annealing of the two DSB ends carrying the repeat tract [20,21].

In the present work, we used the Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 endonuclease (SpCas9) to induce a DSB within the same long CTG trinucleotide repeat integrated in the yeast genome. The break was made at the 3' end of the repeat tract (Fig 1A), using a guide RNA that targets the repeat tract. Frequent rearrangements were found in surviving cells, with local deletions as well as more extensive ones involving recombination between retrotransposon LTRs. Survival and repair depended on RAD50, RAD52, SAE2 and DNL4 and double-strand break resection was abolished in rad50Δ and sae2Δ mutants. A more specific version of the nuclease, Enhanced SpCas9, generated the same rerrangements. In addition, we also discovered that gene conversion was less efficient when SpCas9 was used to induce a DSB within a CTG repeat tract that could be repaired with a homologous template, suggesting that the trinucleotide repeat may interfere with gene conversion too.

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Fig 1. SpCas9 and eSpCas9 DSB induction in wild type and mutant strains.

A: Sequence of the SUP4::(CTG)n locus. The CTG trinucleotide repeat tract comes from a human DM1 patient and is shown in blue. The flanking non-repeated DNA is in black. For each guide RNA, the PAM, the gRNA sequence as well as the expected DSB site are indicated. B: Southern blots of yeast strains during time courses. Lanes labeled SpCas9-gRNA and SpCas9ΔCter+gRNA are control strains in which no DSB was visible. In the strain expressing both SpCas9 and the gRNA, two bands are visible in addition to the parental allele (1966 bp). One band corresponds to the 3' end of the DSB containing a small number of triplets (821 bp), the other one corresponds to the 5' end of the DSB containing most of the repeat tract (1145 bp). C: Quantification of 5' and 3' DSB signals. For each time points, the total 5' + 3' signals were quantified and plotted as a ratio of the total signal in the lane. Three independent time courses were run in each strain background (except rad50Δ and eSpCas9 for which two time courses were run) and plots show the average of three (or two) time courses. Error bars are 95% confidence intervals.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g001

Results

A Cas9-induced double-strand break within CTG repeats induces cell death and chromosomal deletions around the repeat tract

In previous work, we showed that a TALEN targeted at the CTG trinucleotide repeat from the human DMPK gene 3' UTR integrated in a yeast chromosome, was extremely efficient at contracting the repeat tract below the pathological length [20,21]. In order to determine whether the CRISPR-Cas9 system could be used in the same manner, a plasmid-borne Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 nuclease (SpCas9) was expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae from a GAL1-inducible promoter [22]. The same plasmid also carried a CTG guide RNA (hereafter named gRNA#1) under the control of the constitutive SNR52 promoter. The PAM used in this experiment was the TGG sequence located right at the border between the CTG tract and non-repeated DNA (Fig 1A). As controls, we used the same SpCas9-containing plasmid without the gRNA or a frameshift mutant of the SpCas9 gene resulting in a premature stop codon (SpCas9ΔNdeI) and the gRNA#1. The same genetic assay as previously described was used [20,21]. It is based on a modified suppressor tRNA gene (SUP4) in which a CTG trinucleotide repeat was integrated. The length of the CTG repeat at the start of the experiment was determined to be approximately 80 triplets. Four hours after transition from glucose to galactose medium, two faint bands were visible on a Southern blot, corresponding to the 5' and 3' ends of the SpCas9 DSB. No signal was detected in control strains (Fig 1B). The DSB was quantified to be present in ca. 10%-15% of the cells at any given time point and remained the same for the duration of the time course. No evidence for repeat tract contraction was visible. Survival to the SpCas9 break was low (17.9%±4%), as calculated from CFU on galactose plates over CFU on glucose plates (Fig 2, see Materials & Methods). Surviving colonies were picked, total genomic DNA was extracted and the SUP4::CTG locus was analyzed by Southern blot. Patterns observed were remarkably different among clones, most of them showing bands of aberrant molecular weight, either much larger or much shorter than the repeat tract. In some clones, a total absence of signal suggested that the probe target was deleted and in other cases weakness of the signal was compatible with a partial deletion (Fig 3A). To understand these abnormal patterns, the genome of nine surviving clones were totally sequenced by paired-end Illumina. As a control, one clone in which SpCas9 had not been induced was also sequenced. In all nine cases, a deletion around the repeat tract was found, extending from a few nucleotides to several kilobases (Fig 3B). Some of the deletions involved flanking Ty1 retrotransposon LTRs, and in one case (clone #2), a complex event between a distant LTR (δ16) and the δ20 LTR close to the repeat tract was detected. Following this discovery, total genomic DNA was extracted from more surviving colonies, analyzed by Southern blot and deletion junctions were amplified by PCR and Sanger sequencing. Two different sets of primers were used to amplify the junction, su47/su48 allowing to amplify local deletions around the repeat tract, whereas su23/su42 were used to amplify larger deletions between Ty1 LTRs (Fig 4). Surviving colonies were classified into 12 different types, according to the SUP4::CTG locus after SpCas9 induction: type I corresponded to a colony in which the repeat tract was unchanged (or was slightly expanded), type II to a colony in which a repeat contraction occurred, type III-V corresponded to local deletions around the repeat tract, types VI-XI to more extensive deletions, and type XII to a complex event between another δ element and δ20. A few examples of junction sequences are shown in S1 Fig.

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Fig 2. Yeast survival to Cas9 induction.

For each strain, the same number of cells were plated on galactose and glucose plates and the survival was expressed in CFU number on galactose plates over CFU number on glucose plates. The mean and the 95% confidence interval are plotted for each strain. Significant t-test p-values when compared to wild-type SpCas9 survival are indicated by asterisks. See Materials & Methods for statistics.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g002

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Fig 3. Chromosomal rearrangements following SpCas9 induction.

A: Southern blot of genomic DNA at the SUP4 locus in the wild-type strain. The probe hybridizes ~300 bp downstream the repeat tract (see Fig 3B). The dotted red line shows the initial length of the CTG repeat tract. The lane labeled "Glucose" contains a clone in which Cas9 was not induced. Lanes numbered #1 through #19 contain independent clones in which Cas9 was induced. Asterisks point to lanes in which no signal was detected, meaning that the probe containing sequence was deleted. Note that signal intensities varies among lanes, showing that the probe did not fully bind to its target sequence, due to its partial deletion. B: Some examples of chromosome rearrangements following Cas9 induction in the wild-type strain. The genomic locus surrounding SUP4 is shown on top, ARS1018 is drawn in red, delta elements are in grey, protein-coding genes are colored in blue and tRNA genes in purple. The DSB (vertical purple arrow) is induced within SUP4::(CTG)n. Chromosome coordinates are indicated above and the probe used for hybridization is represented by an horizontal red bar. The locus sequence was retrieved from the Saccharomyces Genome Database (http://yeastgenome.org/, genome version R64-2-1, released 18th November 2014). Under the reference locus are cartooned the different chromosomal structures observed in some of the survivors. A yeast colony that was grown in glucose was also sequenced as a control. For each clone, vertical dotted lines represent junctions of rearrangements observed, with deletion sizes indicated in base pairs. Asterisk: clone #2 showed a complex rearrangement with a local inverted duplication involving the δ16 LTR and the 3' end of the KCH1 gene 5 kb upstream SUP4. Two clones (#8 and #9) exhibit exactly the same chromosomal deletion at precisely the same nucleotides. Note that CDC8 is an essential gene. C: Southern blot of genomic DNA at the SUP4 locus in the rad52Δ strain. Legend as for Fig 3A. D: Southern blot of genomic DNA at the SUP4 locus in the sae2Δ strain. Legend as for Fig 3A. Note that for this Southern blot genomic DNA was digested with EcoRV (instead of Ssp I, see Methods), therefore the expected CTG repeat length was around 1.8 kb, instead of 1 kb.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g003

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Fig 4. Summary of chromosomal rearrangements observed in wild-type and mutant strains, following SpCas9 induction.

Left: The twelve different possible outcomes following SpCas9 induction are shown, subdivided in local and extensive deletions (see text for details). The SUP4 locus is pictured and shows the position of each genetic element on yeast chromosome X. The probe used on Southern blots is shown, as well as both primer couples used to amplify the locus. In order to assess a given clone to a rearrangement type, the following rules were followed: i) when a band was detected by Southern blot, primers su47 and su48 were used to amplify the locus and sequence it. These events corresponded to types I-V. The absence of a PCR product indicated that primer su48 genomic sequence was probably deleted and therefore primers su23 and su42 were used to amplify and sequence the locus. These were classified as types IV-V events; ii) when no band was detected by Southern blot, primers su 23 and su42 were directly used to amplify and sequence the locus. These events were classified as types VI-X and XII. When no PCR product was obtained, it meant that at least one of the two primers genomic sequence was probably deleted and these events were classified as type XI. Note that this last category may also contain rare -but possible- chromosomal translocations that ended up in puting each primer in a separate chromosome, making unobtainable the PCR product. The extent of type XI deletions cannot go downstream the su42 primer, since the CDC8 gene is essential. Right: The proportion of each type or event recovered is represented for wild type and mutants. The asterisk near Type I events in the rad50Δ strain indicates that some of them were small expansions (see text). Altogether, 262 surviving clones were sequenced, distributed as follows: WT: 51, rad52Δ: 29, dnl4Δ: 61, sae2Δ: 32, dnl4Δ sae2Δ: 47, rad50Δ: 42.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g004

Chromosomal deletions are under the control of RAD50, RAD52, DNL4 and SAE2

We next decided to investigate the role of several genes known to be involved in DSB repair on chromosomal deletions generated by the SpCas9 nuclease. In a rad52Δ strain, in which all homologous recombination was abolished, survival decreased but was not significantly different from wild type (7.6%±0.7%, Fig 2). Molecular analysis of the survivors by Southern blot showed that deletions seemed to be less extensive than in the wild-type strain, fewer lanes showing a partial or total absence of signal (Fig 3C). Junction sequencing confirmed that deletions between Ty LTRs were lost (Type VI events), except for two cases in which the deletion occurred through annealing of eight or nine nucleotides and was therefore RAD52 independent (Fig 4 and S1 Fig, clones #C4 and #C7). This result showed that about 50% of colonies growing on galactose plates survived the DSB by RAD52-dependent homologous recombination between two LTR elements flanking the trinucleotide repeat tract.

The possible role of non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ) in the observed deletions was also addressed by deleting the gene encoding yeast Ligase IV (DNL4). In the dnl4Δ strain, the level of detected DSBs was slightly lower than in wild type (Fig 1B and 1C). Survival was decreased, but not significantly different from wild type (10.5%±6.3%, Fig 2). Molecular analysis of the survivors showed that local deletions were totally lost, whereas extensive deletions involving Ty LTR represented 84% of all events (Fig 4 and S1 Fig). Hence, we concluded that all local deletions were NHEJ dependent.

In a recent work, we showed that SAE2 was essential to repair a DSB induced by a TALEN within a long trinucleotide repeat. In its absence, unrepaired breaks accumulated and DSB resection was lost on the trinucleotide repeat-containing end [20]. We therefore tested the effect of a sae2Δ mutation on a SpCas9 DSB in the same experimental system. Southern blot analysis of repair intermediates showed that DSB ends accumulated twice as much in the sae2Δ mutant as compared to wild type (Fig 1B and 1C). In addition, a smear was detected below the 5' DSB end (Fig 1B, orange bracket), hallmark of an incomplete resection triggering a repair defect [23]. Survival was similar to wild type (21.5%±2.9%, Fig 2). Southern blot analysis of surviving colonies displayed very little size changes as compared to uninduced controls (Fig 3D). However, sequencing showed that the most frequent event was an insertion (or sometimes a small deletion) of one to eight nucleotides between the PAM and the repeat tract (Type III events, Fig 4). These local insertions represented 78% of all survivors, whereas only one Ty LTR recombination (Type VI) was detected (S1 Fig). This result showed that in the absence of SAE2, long range deletions were lost, probably due to the inability to resect the DSB into single-stranded DNA prone for homologous recombination.

The double mutant sae2Δ dnl4Δ was also built and showed an additive effect on survival, with a significant 30-fold reduction in CFU on galactose plates (0.6%±0.9%, Fig 2). This result proved that in the absence of one of the two genes repair could occur by the other pathway, but absence of both genes was almost lethal to yeast cells receiving a SpCas9 DSB. Southern analysis showed that DSB levels were similar to sae2Δ levels (ca. 24% after 8 hrs versus 28% for sae2Δ), showing that SAE2 was epistatic to DNL4. The smear corresponding to resection defects was also visible (Fig 1B, orange bracket). Interestingly, 21% of survivors exhibited zero to two triplets lost, which could be attributed to natural microsatellite instability. These were classified as Type I events and were specific of the sae2Δ dnl4Δ double mutant (Fig 4 and S1 Fig). It is possible that given the low survival rate, cells in which SpCas9 and/or the gRNA was mutated were positively selected during the time course in liquid culture and were therefore subsequently recovered on galactose plates. Remarkably, to the exception of the Type I events hereabove mentioned, all but one event corresponded to extensive deletions around the repeat tract, similarly to the single dnl4Δ mutant.

Finally, in a rad50Δ strain, the DSB accumulated over the duration of the time course at levels similar to sae2Δ mutants (Fig 1B and 1C). No smear was detected in this strain background, suggesting that the sae2Δ resection defect was specific of this mutant and did not involve the integrity of the MRX-Sae2 complex. Survival was very low in this strain background (0.3%±0.4%), significantly different from wild type but not from the sae2Δ dnl4Δ double mutant (Fig 2). Survivor analysis showed a few repeat contractions (Type II), but most events were deletions between LTRs (Type VI), large deletions (Type XI) or complex rearrangements (Type XII), a pattern not significantly different from what was observed with the sae2Δ dnl4Δ double mutant (Fig 4). However, uniquely present in this strain background, were found three repeat expansions, two of them associated with the insertion of a 'C' in the first triplet preceding the PAM, most probably inhibiting Cas9 recognition and cutting (classified as Type I events in Fig 4, see S1 Fig). This suggests that repeat expansions are more frequent in a rad50Δ mutant in the presence of a DSB, as previously observed [24]. Such expansions were not recovered in the sae2Δ dnl4Δ double mutant, showing that this strain phenotype does not recapitulate exactly the rad50Δ phenotype, or that the rather limited number of survivors analyzed was not sufficient to detect a small number of expansions.

In conclusion, when a SpCas9 DSB was induced into a long CTG trinucleotide repeat, cell survival was low and depended on RAD50, RAD52, SAE2 and DNL4. Two classes of repair events were found: local deletions under the control of RAD50 and DNL4 and therefore the NHEJ pathway, and extensive deletions under the control of SAE2 and RAD52. In addition, the deletion of RAD50 almost completely recapitulated the sae2Δ dnl4Δ double mutation, except that the smear was not visible on Southern blots and a few expansions were recovered.

Enhanced SpCas9 generates the same chromosomal deletions as SpCas9

Over the last four years, several mutants of the widely used SpCas9 have been engineered or selected by genetic screens. SpCas9-HF1 and eSpCas9 were built to exhibit less off-target DSBs [25,26], HypaCas9 was made to be even more accurate [27], Sniper-Cas9 also showed reduced off-target effects [28], while evoCas9 was selected in yeast for improved specificity [29]. We decided to explore the possibility that chromosomal deletions observed in our experimental system were partly due to the fact that SpCas9 exhibited a high off-target activity on long CTG trinucleotide repeat tract, perhaps by generating more than one DSB within the repeat tract, or within the surrounding loci. In order to test this hypothesis, Enhanced SpCas9 (eSpCas9) was expressed in yeast, along with the same guide RNA as previously (gRNA #1, Fig 1A). Survival was slightly higher than with SpCas9 (26.3%±3.0%), but not significantly different (t test p-value = 0.06). DSB end accumulation was lower than SpCas9 (Fig 1B and 1C). Molecular analysis of surviving yeast cells did not show any statistical difference between types of deletions observed with eSpCas9 as compared to SpCas9 (Chi2 p-value = 0.14) (Fig 5 and S1 Fig). A second guide RNA (gRNA#2) was designed, so that the DSB would be made two nucleotides closer to the repeat tract end (Fig 1A). Interestingly, the number of deletions involving a LTR (Types VI-IX) was lower than with gRNA#1 (35% with gRNA#2 vs 63% with gRNA#1) but the proportion of very large deletions (Type XI) significantly increased from 4% to 31% (Chi2 p-value = 1.6 10−3). We concluded that moving the DSB cut site two nucleotides toward non-repeated DNA increased the outcome of very large deletions. Altogether, these results show that using a more specific version of SpCas9 did not decrease chromosomal rearrangements, suggesting that deletions seen with SpCas9 were probably not due to extra off-target DSBs within the CTG repeat tract or the surrounding loci.

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Fig 5. Summary of chromosomal rearrangements observed in following SpCas9 and enhanced SpCas9 (eSpCas9) inductions.

See Fig 4 for legend. eSpCas9 #1 and #2 refer respectively to guide RNAs #1 and #2 described in Fig 1A. The following number of surviving clones were analyzed: SpCas9: 51, eSpCas9 #1: 49, eSpCas9 #2: 48. See text for details.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g005

Gene conversion efficacy is decreased when a Cas9 DSB is made within a long CTG trinucleotide repeat

Gene conversion is a very efficient DSB-repair mechanism in S. cerevisiae. We previously showed that a single DSB induced by the I-SceI meganuclease in a yeast chromosome was efficiently repaired using a CTG repeat-containing homologous template as a donor [24,30,31]. In order to determine whether a Cas9-induced DSB within a CTG repeat was properly repaired by the recombination machinery, we reused a similar experimental system in which two copies of the SUP4 allele were present on yeast chromosome X, one containing a (CTG)60 repeat tract and the other copy containing an I-SceI recognition site (Fig 6A). In this ectopic gene conversion assay, 80.2%±2.3% of yeast cells survived after an I-SceI DSB and 100% of survivors were repaired by gene conversion using the ectopic SUP4::CTG copy as a donor [31]. When SpCas9 was induced in the same yeast strain along with gRNA#1, only 32.6%±3.8% of CFU formed on galactose plates (Fig 2). Molecular analysis of surviving cells showed that 89% (34 out of 38) repaired by ectopic gene conversion, as expected, and now contain two I-SceI recognition sites, one in each SUP4 copy (Fig 6B, GC events). However, one expansion event was also detected, as well as one local deletion (Type IV) and two events involving a deletion and a DNA insertion (Type V). Intriguingly, the DNA insertion was a 211 bp piece of DNA from the YAK1 gene, located 158 kilobases upstream the ARG2 locus, on chromosome X left arm. This gene contains a long and imperfect CAG/CTG repeat within its reading frame, like many yeast genes [3235]. An unusual recombination event occurred between the YAK1 CAG/CTG repeat and the ARG2 repeat, leading to a chimeric repeat (Fig 6C). This rearrangement may be the result of an off-target DSB generated by SpCas9 within the YAK1 repeat, or an abnormal recombination event between the two CTG repeats following SpCas9 induction. Using the CRISPOR in silico tools, off-target sites were examined for guide RNA #1 [36]. Two off-targets with zero mismatches were predicted, in the NGR1 and SGF73 genes. However, since they are using a non-canonical PAM (TGA), the Cutting Frequency Determination score (CFD score, ref. [37]) was very low at these two sites, suggesting that they would be poor substrate for SpCas9 with this gRNA (S1 Table). When one mismatch was allowed, two hits were found in the YAK1 gene, one of them with a canonical NGG PAM exhibiting the best CFD score of all predicted off-target sites (S1 Table). We therefore decided to check whether an off-target DSB could be induced within the YAK1 gene by SpCas9. A time course was performed in conditions in which the nuclease was non-induced or induced, and the resulting Southern blot was hybridized with a YAK1 specific probe. No evidence for a band that could correspond to a DSB at this locus could be seen. Faint signals were detected, both in non-induced and induced conditions, at molecular weights that did not fit the expected DSB size (S2 Fig). We concluded that, if an off-target DSB was made by SpCas9 at the YAK1 locus, it was too rare to be detected by Southern blot, and presumably could not influence cell survival, nor be sufficient to trigger frequent ectopic recombination events with the SUP4 locus.

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Fig 6. Chromosomal rearrangements observed at the ARG2 locus, following SpCas9 induction.

A: ARG2 and SUP4 loci drawn to scale. A 2.6 kb piece of DNA containing 1.8 kb of the SUP4 locus in which a CTG repeat was integrated, as well as the TRP1 selection marker were integrated at ARG2 [31]. The TRP1 gene is not represented here but is centromere-proximal located. B: Types of rearrangements observed. Types IV and V deletions are explained in Fig 5. GC: gene conversion with SUP4::I-SceI. Exp.: CTG repeat expansion. C: Type V rearrangements involving the YAK1 gene. The off-target in YAK1 identified by CRISPOR is underlined. The blue sequence from YAK1 recombined with the red sequence from SUP4 to give a hybrid molecule called "Junction".

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g006

Resection of a Cas9-induced double-strand break

Quantitative PCR experiments were performed in order to determine the resection level in strains in which Cas9 was induced. The nuclease generates a DSB in the very last CTG triplets of the repeat tract (Fig 1A). Therefore, the 5' end of the break contains most of the 80 triplets whereas the 3' end contains only two triplets. This asymmetry allows to compare resection of a repeated and structured DNA end versus non-repeated DNA, concomitantly and in the same experimental setting. We took advantage of the convenient position of four EcoRV restriction sites, two on each side of the DSB, at different distances from the break (Fig 7A). Primers were designed in such a way that EcoRV digested DNA could not be PCR amplified. However, if DNA resection reached an EcoRV site, the resulting single-stranded DNA became resistant to digestion and therefore susceptible to amplification. In wild-type cells after eight hours, resection of the Cas9 DSB was always 100% at all EcoRV sites, except at the 3' distal site in which it was a little lower, around 70% (Fig 7A). In dnl4Δ cells, resection was not statistically different from wild type. In the rad50Δ mutant, DSB resection was totally abolished on the 5' end of the break that contains most of the repeat tract and severely impaired on the other end, showing that the MRX-Sae2 complex was essential on both DSB ends. Interestingly, the sae2Δ mutant exhibited a resection defect on the 5' end of the break but not on the other side. This was also true for the double mutant sae2Δ dnl4Δ. All these data prove that: i) Ligase IV plays no role in DSB resection; ii) Sae2 is essential to resect a long CTG trinucleotide repeat but is dispensable to resect a non-repeated DSB end.

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Fig 7. Quantification of double-strand break resection.

A: Couples of primers used to amplify each EcoRV site are indicated above and can be found in S3 Table. EcoRV sites are shown by vertical arrows. Resection graphs are plotted for each primer pair. Average relative values of resection as compared to the total DSB amount detected on Southern blots are shown at 6 hours (in blue) and 8 hours (in red), along with standard deviations. B: Mechanistic model for chromosomal deletions following a Cas9-induced DSB. See text for details. Resulting deletion types are indicated in red near each pathway.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.g007

Genome-wide mutation spectrum in cells expressing SpCas9

When carefully looking at deletion borders in haploid strains in which SpCas9 was induced, they were found to be more extensive on the 5' side of the break than on the 3' side (Fig 4). This suggests that larger 3' deletions encompassing the essential gene CDC8 or its promoter may not have been recovered because they would be lethal, probably counting for some of the lethality observed. In order to check this hypothesis, we expressed SpCas9 in diploids containing SUP4::(CTG)n repeat tracts on both homologues. In these cells, both chromosomes could be cut by the nuclease. We quantified by qPCR CDC8 copy number in six independent diploid survivors. In all cases, it was reduced by half as compared to a control qPCR on another chromosome (S3A Fig). This showed that in these cells, only one of the two CDC8 alleles was present, suggesting that the other was often deleted during DSB repair. In order to check if the whole chromosome could have been lost, we also amplified a region near the JEM1 gene, on the other chromosomal arm, near the ARG2 gene. Surviving clones showed a significantly higher signal, compatible with the presence of two chromosomes (Mann-Whitney-Wilcoxon rank test, p-value = 10−3). Therefore, it was concluded that the mortality observed in haploid cells expressing SpCas9 was at least partly due to the frequent deletion of the essential CDC8 gene, but did not induce significant chromosome loss.

In order to detect possible off-target mutations, independent haploid and diploid colonies in which SpCas9 had been induced were deep-sequenced, using Illumina paired-end technology. In diploid cells, two nucleotide substitutions were detected out of five independent clones when SpCas9 was repressed (S3B Fig). When the nuclease was induced, six mutations were detected out of 18 sequenced clones, a similar proportion. One 36-bp deletion was found in the FLO11 minisatellite and two deletions of one repeat unit were found in AT dinucleotide repeats, but no mutation was found in any other CAG/CTG repeat tract. Altogether, we concluded that SpCas9 expression in diploid cells did not significantly increase genome-wide mutation frequency. The genome of 10 independent haploid cells in which SpCas9 was induced was also completely sequenced. Eight mutations were detected among six of these survivors, all of them being nucleotide substitutions in non-repeated DNA (S3B Fig). This is statistically not different from what was observed in diploids (Fisher exact test p-value = 0.12). We concluded that besides chrosomosomal deletions around the SUP4 locus observed in these haploids, SpCas9 did not induce other mutations in yeast cells, to a level detectable with the present sequencing approach.

Discussion

SpCas9-induced DSB repair within CTG repeats generates chromosomal deletions

In previous work, in which we induced a DSB within a CTG repeat using a dedicated TALEN, 100% of surviving yeast colonies repaired the break by contracting the repeat tract (S4 Fig and ref. 21). These contractions occurred by single-strand annealing, and depended on RAD52, RAD50 and SAE2, but was independent of LIG4, POL32 and RAD51 [20]. It was therefore striking and completely unexpected that a DSB made by the SpCas9 nuclease (or by its more specific mutant version, eSpCas9) at exactly the same location within the very same CTG trinucleotide repeat induced frequent chromosomal deletions around the repeat tract and almost no repeat contraction.

With the TALEN, repeat contraction was proposed to be an iterative phenomenon, involving several rounds of cutting and contraction until the repeat tract was too short for the two TALEN arms to dimerize and induce a DSB [20,21]. A similar outcome was expected with SpCas9, iterative rounds of cutting and contraction could occur until the remaining CTG repeat tract would be too short for the gRNA to bind and induce a DSB. But this was not observed here, surprisingly proving that a SpCas9-induced DSB was differently repaired from a TALEN-induced DSB targeting the same exact repeated sequence. Previous terminal-transferase mediated PCR of four TALEN-induced DSB showed that the break left 2–11 bp of homology, probably due to variable positioning of the left TALEN arm on the repeated sequence [20]. In comparison, Cas9 should not have any binding flexibility and should leave 5 bp of homology each time it cuts. We therefore think this is unlikely to explain the difference between the two nucleases, since even though the TALEN sometimes leave very little homology, no chromosomal rearrangement was observed. Reasons for this discrepancy may include different DSB ends (4 nucleotides 5' overhangs with the TALEN, blunt ends with Cas9), different substrate-enzyme kinetics of the TALEN as compared to Cas9, a role for the guide RNA in maintaining both ends together after cutting, or differences in checkpoint activation, these hypotheses being neither exhaustive nor mutually exclusive. These possibilities are now being investigated. Note that the use of PolQ-mediated micro homologies for end joining is very efficient in human cells and similar strategies might be more effective for contracting repeats in patient cells.

Spontaneous homologous recombination events between delta elements surrounding SUP4 were already described by the past by Rothstein and colleagues [38]. Recombination between δ18/ δ20 or δ19/ δ20 was less frequent than between δ16/ δ20 or δ17/ δ19. This was the opposite in our experiments. This is probably due to the way recombination was triggered. In the Rothstein et al. article, recombination was spontaneous, therefore favoring LTRs with the highest sequence identity (δ16/ δ20 or δ17/ δ19). In our case, the initiating event was a DSB always at the same position, between δ19 and δ20. Resection occured until the closest regions of homology were revealed, hence favoring δ18/ δ20 or δ19/ δ20 over recombination with the more distant δ16 or δ17. In addition, in the present case, Cas9-induced deletions also involved microhomology sequences or no homology at all, suggesting that repair depended on the initiating damage (replication-induced single-strand nicks vs. nuclease-induced double-strand breaks). Our data are also reminiscent of a previous work in which spontaneous deletions around the URA2 gene were classified in seven different classes, six of them harboring microhomologies at their junctions and one showing no obvious homology [39].

In recent work, using a GFP reporter system in human cells, Cinesi and colleagues showed that SpCas9 induced contractions as well as expansions of CTG trinucleotide repeats, whereas the nickase mutant SpCas9-D10A only induced contractions. By small pool-PCR analysis, a four-fold increase in the rate of CTG repeat tract contractions was observed when the nickase was expressed with a CTG-carrying gRNA, as compared to the expression of the nuclease alone ([40], Fig 2C). The sp-PCR experiment was not performed when the double-strand endonuclease SpCas9 was expressed, so it is not possible to determine whether a similar increase in contractions would be observed. When individual clones were sequenced, local deletions of the triplet repeat tract were found in three clones out of 17 (17.6%) when a CAG-carrying gRNA was used, and two clones out 11 (18.2%) when a CTG-carrying gRNA was expressed ([40], S3 Fig). These numbers were not statistically different from what was observed in the absence of the SpCas9-D10A nickase ([40], S1 Fig). There is no report of repeat tract sequencing when SpCas9 was expressed, so it is not possible to know if the double-strand endonuclease would make more (or less) deletions in this experimental system. In our present experiments, eight clones out of 51 (15.7%) analyzed contained a local deletion (Types IV events, Fig 4) similar to those described by Cinesi and colleagues. However, it must be noted that in their work, only the top 1% brightest GFP-positive cells were sequenced, whereas no selection was used in our experiments; surviving colonies were randomly picked and analyzed at the molecular level. Therefore, the absolute frequency of local deletions cannot be reliably compared between the two experimental setups.

It must be noted that an approach using the SpCas9-D10A nickase was successfully implemented to delete the CAG trinucleotide repeat involved in Huntington disease, by making two single-strand nicks, upstream and downstream the repeat tract [41].

In another work looking at the effect of a Cas9-induced DSB at the LYS2 locus in S. cerevisiae, the authors found frequent POL4-dependent small insertions (1–3 bp) in 42–68% of the survivors (depending on the PAM used) and local deletions (1–17 bp) in the remaining cases. However, given that there is no transposon or transposon remnant in the close proximity of the LYS2 locus, the authors could not retrieve LTR deletions [42]. This strongly suggests that deletions observed heavily depend on the surrounding chromosomal location where the DSB is made.

CTG trinucleotide repeats interfer with SpCas9-triggered gene conversion

When an I-SceI DSB was induced within a SUP4 allele, the break could be repaired by gene conversion with a CTG repeat-containing homologous donor at the ARG2 locus. All yeast cells repaired by gene conversion with the donor, generating repeat contractions and expansions in the process [31]. Here, the exact reverse reaction was induced, the break was made within CTG repeats and repaired with a non-repeated sequence. DSB repair was much less efficient, since only 32.6% of the cells survived (Fig 2) and less specific since 10% of the repair events were unfaithful recombination (Fig 6B). This shows that when a Cas9 DSB was made into a CTG repeat, gene conversion was partially impaired, either by the repeat tract or by the Cas9 protein, or by both. Note that, in past experiments, when the DSB was made in the I-SceI recognition site, less that 10 nucleotides needed to be resected on each side of the break before homology with the other SUP4 allele could be reached. In our present experiments, when the DSB was made within the CTG repeat tract, 64 nucleotides needed to be resected on one side and 304 on the other side of the break before homology with the other SUP4 allele could be reached. This could also explain the better survival observed in the former case.

Ligase IV and Sae2 are respectively driving local and extensive chromosomal deletions

Yeast Ligase IV is encoded by the DNL4 gene and is the enzyme used to ligate DSB ends during non homologous end-joining [43]. It was previously shown that RAD50 and SAE2 were essential to resect and process a TALEN-induced DSB but a DNL4 deletion had no effect on break processing, cell survival or repair efficacy [20]. On the contrary, repair of a Cas9, an HO or an I-SceI DSB at the MAT locus, in the absence of any homologous donor casette, was shown to be dependent on the product of the DNL4 gene [42,44]. SpCas9 DSB repair has also been studied in human cells in the presence of a drug (NU7441), acting as a chemical inhibitor of non-homologous end-joining. In these conditions, the frequency of single-base insertions and small deletions decreased whereas larger deletions increased, suggesting that these repair events occurred by an alternative end-joining mechanism (alt-EJ/MMEJ) involving microhomologies flanking the DSB [45,46]. Here, we showed that when DNL4 was inactivated, local deletions were totally lost. However, survival was not significantly decreased because yeast cells could repair the DSB using LTR recombination, generating extensive deletions around the repeat tract (Fig 4). Supporting this model, the absence of any resection defect in the dnl4Δ mutant demonstrated that in the absence of end-joining, resection may take place very efficiently to repair the DSB by homologous recombination, using flanking homologies.

SAE2 is associated to the MRE11-RAD50-XRS2 complex, whose roles are multiple during DSB repair [47] and it was proposed to encode an endonuclease activity essential to process DNA hairpins [48], as well as to resect I-SceI double-strand breaks [49]. We previously showed that it was essential to resect a TALEN-induced DSB end containing a long CTG trinucleotide repeat, but less important to resect the non-repeated end [20]. In the present experiments, extensive deletions involving LTR elements were lost in a sae2Δ mutant, and 97% of yeast cells repaired the DSB by local deletions, most of them resulting in insertions or deletions between the PAM and the gRNA sequence (Fig 4), inactivating SpCas9 capacity to induce another DSB. Small insertions of a few nucleotides were also frequently detected following SpCas9 DSB induction at the VDJ locus in human B cells [50] or at the MAT locus in S. cerevisiae [42]. However, in our experiments, all nucleotides inserted were C, T or G, all three encoded by the gRNA. No insertion of an adenosine residue was found out of 28 insertions sequenced (S1 Fig). This intriguing observation suggests the possibility that the gRNA could be used as a template to repair the DSB, as it was demonstrated that a single-stranded RNA could be used to repair an HO-induced DSB into the LEU2 gene [51].

Although DNL4 and SAE2 trigger different types of chromosomal deletions and none of the single mutants significantly decreased survival, the dnl4Δ sae2Δ double mutant abolished repair, like the rad50Δ mutant, since only 0.6% of the cells survived (Fig 2), showing the synthetic effect of both mutations. However, repair events in the double mutant were similar to those observed in dnl4Δ (Fig 4). It is possible that other nucleases, like EXO1 or DNA2, could perform long range resection in the absence of SAE2 [49,52], allowing the occurrence of extensive deletions (Types VI-XI).

In order to exclude the possibility that differences between wild type and mutants could be due to lower or higher expression of Cas9 in different backgrounds, the amount of Cas9 protein in each strain as compared to glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PDH, the product of the ZWF1 gene in budding yeast) was determined by Western blots. G6PDH is one of the most abundant proteins in budding yeast, with ca. 14,000 molecules per cell (Saccharomyces Genome Database, https://www.yeastgenome.org/locus/S000005185). Cas9 level showed a small 2-fold decrease in dnl4Δ, sae2Δ and dnl4Δ sae2Δ strains, as compared to wild type, but no difference was observed in the rad50Δ mutant (S5 Fig). We concluded that the amount of SpCas9 in all strains was comparable to G6PDH. Therefore, phenotypic differences observed in mutants could not be due to a much higher or much lower expression of SpCas9 in these strains, as compared to wild type.

All these results are compatible with a model in which a SpCas9 DSB was tentatively repaired by NHEJ first (Fig 7B). In the absence of RAD50, the MRX-Sae2 complex could not assemble, resection could not occur, NHEJ was impossible and DSB ends were lost, triggering high mortality. If DNL4 was inactivated, resection proceeded normally and when reaching flanking LTRs, repair occured by RAD52-mediated SSA. In the absence of this gene, the break was repaired by RAD52-independent local deletions. When SAE2 was inactivated, resection was impeded on the 5' DSB end, leading to resection defects observed as smears on Southern blots. Mutagenic NHEJ was favored, leading to local insertions and deletions. It is unknown whether Sae2 would play the same essential role on other secondary structure-forming trinucleotide repeats, like GAA or CGG triplets, or if its activity is specific to CTG triplets, hence of a structure rather than a repeat, but this important question is currently under investigation.

Materials and methods

Yeast strains and plasmids

All mutant strains were built from strain GFY6162-3D by classical gene replacement method [53], using KANMX4 or HIS3 as marker (S2 Table). KANMX4 cassettes were amplified from the EUROSCARF deletion library, using primers located 1kb upstream and downstream the cassette. VMS1/VMAS1 were used to amplify rad52Δ::KANMX, VMS2/VMAS2 were used to amplify rad51Δ::KANMX, VMS3/VMAS3 were used to amplify pol32Δ::KANMX, VMS4/VMAS4 were used to amplify dnl4Δ::KANMX, VMS6/VMAS6 were used to amplify rad50Δ::KANMX and SAE2up/SAE2down were used to amplify sae2Δ::KANMX (S3 Table). VMY350 and VMY352 strains were respectively used to construct VMY650 and VMY352 by mating-type switching, as follows: the pJH132 vector [54] carrying the HO endonuclease under the control of an inducible GAL1-10 promoter was transformed in the haploid MATα strains. After 5h of growth in lactate medium, HO expression was induced by addition of 2% galactose (final concentration) and grown for 1.5 hour. Cells were then plated on YPD and mating type was checked three days later by crosses with both MATa and MATα tester strains.

For SpCas9 inductions, addgene plasmid #43804 containing the nuclease under the control of the GalL promoter and the LEU2 selection marker was digested with HpaI and cloned into yeast by homology-driven recombination [55] with a single PCR amplified fragment containing the SNR52 promoter, the gRNA#1 and the SUP4 terminator, using primers SNR52Left and SNR52Right (S3 Table) to give plasmid pTRi203. A frameshift was then introduced in this plasmid by NdeI digestion followed by T4 DNA polymerase treatment and religation of the plasmid on itself, to give plasmid pTRi206. In this plasmid, the SpCas9 gene is interrupted by a stop codon after amino acid Ile161. The haploid GFY6162-3D strain (or its mutant derivatives), was subsequently transformed with pTRi203 or pTRi206 and transformants were selected on SC-Leu. The plasmid containing Enhanced SpCas9 (version 1.1, Addgene #71814, Slaymaker et al., 2016) was a generous gift of Carine Giovannangeli from the Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle. The eSpCas9 gene was amplified using primers LP400 and LP401 (S3 Table) and cloned into yeast cells in the Addgene#43804 plasmid digested with BamHI, by homology-driven recombination, with 34-bp homology on one side and 40-bp homology on the other side [55], to give plasmid pLPX11. For the gRNA#1, plasmid pLPX11 was digested with HpaI and cloned into yeast by homology-driven recombination [55] with a single PCR amplified fragment containing the SNR52 promoter, the gRNA#1 and the SUP4 terminator, as above to give plasmid pTRi207. For the gRNA#2, a guide RNA cassette was ordered from ThermoFisher (GeneArt), flanked by EcoRI sites and was cloned in pRS416 [56] using standard procedures to give plasmid pLPX210.

In silico simulations of off-target sites

To assess the number of off-target sites for SpCas9 in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, online tools were used. CRISPOR is a software that evaluates the specificity of a guide RNA through an alignment algorithm that maps sequences to a reference genome to identify putative on- and off- target sites [57]. To predict off-target sites, the online tool sequentially introduces changes in the sequence of the gRNA and checks for homologies in the specified genome [36]. The Cutting Frequency Determination score (CFD score) relies on several criteria to assess off-target probabilities: nucleotide deletions, insertions, mismatches, as well as the position and identity of the mismatch(es) [37].

Cas9 inductions

Before nuclease induction, Southern blot analyses were conducted on several independent subclones to select one containing ca. 80 CTG triplets. For Cas9 inductions, yeast cells were grown overnight at 30°C in liquid SC-Leu medium, then washed with sterile water to remove any trace of glucose. Cells were split in two cultures, half of the cells were grown in synthetic -Leu medium supplemented with 2% galactose (final concentration) and the other half were grown in synthetic -Leu medium supplemented with 2% glucose (final concentration). Around 4x108 cells were collected at different time points (T = 0, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 hours) and killed by addition of sodium azide (0.01% final). Cells were washed with water, and frozen in dry ice before DNA extraction. To determine survival to Cas9 induction, 24 hours after the T0 time point, cells were diluted to an appropriate concentration, then plated on SC-Leu plates containing either 20 g/l glucose or galactose. After 3–5 days of growth at 30°C, ratio of CFU on galactose plates over CFU on glucose plates was considered to be the survival rate.

Double-strand break analysis and quantification

Total genomic DNA (4 μg) of cells collected at each time point was digested for 6h with EcoRV (40 U) (NEB) loaded on a 1% agarose gel (15x20 cm) and run overnight at 1 V/cm. The gel was vaccum transfered in alkaline conditions to a Hybond-XL nylon membrane (GE Healthcare) and hybridized with two randomly-labeled probes specific of each side of the repeat tract, upstream and downstream the SUP4 gene [58]. After washing, the membrane was overnight exposed to a phosphor screen and signals were read and quantified on a FujiFilm FLA-9000. For the YAK1 Southern blot, DNA was digested with BamHI and the probe was a 719 bp probe amplified with YAK1f and YAK1r primers (S3 Table).

SUP4 locus analysis after Cas9 induction

Several colonies from each induced or repressed plates were picked, total genomic DNA (4 μg) was extracted with Zymolyase, digested for 6h by SspI (20 U) (NEB), loaded on a 1% agarose gel (15x20 cm) and run overnight at 1V/cm. The gel was vaccum transfered in alkaline conditions to a Hybond-XL nylon membrane (GE Healthcare) and hybridized with a randomly-labeled PCR fragment specific of a region downstream the SUP4 gene, amplified from the su8-su9 primer couple (S3 Table). After washing, the membrane was overnight exposed on a phosphor screen and signals were revealed on a FujiFilm FLA-9000. Genomic DNA of each clone for which a signal was detected by Southern blot was subsequently amplified with su47-su48 primers and sequenced using su47 (S3 Table). Genomic DNA of clones for which no signal was detected by Southern blot of no PCR product was obtained with su47-su48 were subsequently amplified with su23-su42 primers and sequenced using su42 (S3 Table). Sanger sequencing was performed by GATC biotech.

Western blots

Liquid cultures of each strain were grown to exponential phase in synthetic glucose medium or synthetic galactose medium without leucine, on order to maintain the Cas9 plasmid. Proteins were extracted on 2 x 108 cells in 200 μl Laemmli solution with 100 μl glass beads. Proteins were separated on a 10% acrylamide gel in standard conditions and blotted to a nitrocellulose membrane (Optitran BA-S 83 reinforced NC, Schleicher & Schuell). For Cas9 detection, a monoclonal HRP-conjugated mouse antibody was used (Abcam [7A9-3A3], ab202580, 1/1000 dilution). Note that blocking was achieved in 10 mM Tris-HCl pH8.0, NaCl 150 mM, 0.05% Tween 20, 3% dry milk (instead of the regular 5%). For G6PDH detection, the primary antibody was a polyclonal rabbit antibody (Sigma-Aldrich (A9521), 1/100 000 dilution). A secondary goat anti-rabbit antibody conjugated to horseradish peroxidase was used for detection of G6PDH (Thermo Scientific, 0.16 μg/ml final concentration). Quantification was performed using a ChemiDoc MP Imager (Bio-Rad) with the dedicated Image Lab software. The molecular weight marker used was the Precision Plus Protein Kaleidoscope marker (Bio-Rad).

Analysis of Cas9-induced DSB end resection by qPCR

A real-time PCR assay, using primer pairs flanking EcoRV sites 0.81 kb and 2.94 kb away from the 3’ end of the CTG repeat tract (VMS20/VMAS20 and VMS21/VMAS21 respectively) and 0.88 kb and 1.88 kb away from the 5’end of the CTG repeat tract (VMS22/VMAS22 and VMS23/VMAS23 respectively), was used to quantify end resection. Another pair of primers was used to amplify a region of chromosome X near the ARG2 gene [11], to serve as an internal control of DNA amount (JEM1f-JEM1r). Genomic DNA of cells collected at T = 0h, T = 6h and T = 8h was split in two fractions, incubated at 80°C for 10 minutes in order to inactivate any remaining active DNA nuclease, then one fraction was used for EcoRV digestion and the other one for a mock digestion in a final volume of 15 μl. Samples were incubated for 5h at 37°C, then the enzyme was inactivated for 20 min at 80°C. DNA was subsequentltly diluted by adding 55 μl of ice-cold water, and 4 μl was used for each real-time PCR reaction in a final volume of 25 μl. PCRs were performed with the Absolute SYBR Green Fluorescein mix (Thermo Scientific) in the Mastercycler S realplex (Eppendorf), using the following program: 95°C 15min, 95°C 15sec, 55°C 30 sec, 72°C 30 sec repeated 40 times, followed by a 20 min melting curve. Reactions were performed in triplicates and the mean value was used to determine the amount of resected DNA, using the following formula: raw resection = 2/(1+2ΔCt) with ΔCt = Ct,EcoRV-Ct,mock. Relative resection values were calculated by dividing raw resection values by the percentage of DSB quantified at the corresponding time point.

The same protocol was used to determine the relative amount of CDC8 and chromosome X in surviving clones after Cas9 induction, except that total genomic DNA was not digested prior to real-time PCR. Primer couples VMS23-VMAS23 were used to amplify CDC8 and JEM1f-JEM1r for chromosome X left arm. Primers Chromo4_f and Chromo4_r were were used to amplify a region of chromosome IV as an internal control for total DNA amount. See S3 Table for all primer sequences.

Library preparation for deep-sequencing

Approximately 10 μg of total genomic DNA was extracted and sonicated to an average size of 500 bp, on a Covaris S220 (LGC Genomics) in microtubes AFA (6x16 mm) using the following setup: Peak Incident Power: 105 Watts, Duty Factor: 5%, 200 cycles, 80 seconds. DNA ends were subsequently repaired with T4 DNA polymerase (15 units, NEBiolabs) and Klenow DNA polymerase (5 units, NEBiolabs) and phosphorylated with T4 DNA kinase (50 units, NEBiolabs). Repaired DNA was purified on two MinElute columns (Qiagen) and eluted in 16 μl (32 μl final for each library). Addition of a 3' dATP was performed with Klenow DNA polymerase (exo-) (15 units, NEBiolabs). Home-made adapters containing a 4-bp unique tag used for multiplexing, were ligated with 2 μl T4 DNA ligase (NEBiolabs, 400,000 units/ml). DNA was size fractionated on 1% agarose gels and 500–750 bp DNA fragments were gel extracted with the Qiaquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen). DNA was PCR amplified for 12 cycles with Illumina primers PE1.0 and PE2.0 and Phusion DNA polymerase (1 unit, Thermo Scientific). Six PCR reactions were pooled for each library, and purified on a Qiagen purification column. Elution was performed in 30 μl and DNA was quantified on a spectrophotometer and on agarose gel.

Analysis of paired-end Illumina reads

Multiplexed libraries were loaded on a HiSeq2500 (Illumina), 110 bp paired-end reads for haploids and 260 bp paired-end reads for diploids were generated. Reads quality was evaluated by FastQC v.0.10.1 (http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc/). Reads were mapped along S288C chromosome reference sequence (Saccharomyces Genome Database, release R64-2-1, November 2014), using the paired-end mapping mode of BWA v0.7.4-r385 with default parameters [57]. The output SAM files were converted and sorted to BAM files using SAMtools v0.1.19-44428cd [59]. The command IndelRealigner from GATK v2.4–9 [60] was used to realign the reads. Duplicated reads were removed using the option “MarkDuplicates” implemented in Picard v1.94 (http://picard.sourceforge.net/). Reads uniquely mapped to the reference sequence with a minimum mapping quality of 20 (Phred-scaled) were kept. Mpileup files were generated by SAMtools without BAQ adjustments. SNPs and INDELs were called by the options “mpileup2snp” and “mpileup2indel” of Varscan2 v2.3.6 [61] with a minimum depth of 10 reads for haploids and 20 reads for diploids. Average read coverage was 255X for diploid cells (σ = 187X) and 190X for haploids (σ = 43X). Diploid strains are homozygous except for selection markers and some specific loci like MAT and SUP4. Therefore, de novo heterozygous mutations should represent 50% of reads, on the average. Taking that into account, lower and upper thresholds for variant allele frequency were respectively set between 30% and 70% in diploids. For haploids, the threshold for minimum variant allele frequency was set at 70%. Mutations less than 10 bp away from each other were discarded to avoid mapping problems due to paralogous genes or repeated sequences. To assess microsatellite mutations, we only retained reads uniquely anchored at least 20 bp on each side of the microsatellite [62]. All detected mutations were manually examined using the IGV software (version 2.3.77), and compared between all sequenced libraries for interpretation. All the scripts used in order to process data are available on github (https://github.com/sdeclere/nuclease). All Illumina sequences were uploaded in the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA), accession number PRJEB16068.

Statistical analyses

All analyses were performed using the R package (version 3.6.3) [63]. Survival rates after DSB induction were compared using the t-test (Fig 2). When comparing rates after DSB induction at SUP4 in wild type vs mutant strains, the Bonferroni correction for multiple testing was applied. Deletions and rearrangement types between different strains were compared using the Chi2 test.

Supporting information

S1 Fig. Sequences at the left and right of junctions in rearranged haploid clones.

Junctions were deduced from Illumina read mapping (when available) and confirmed by subsequent PCR and Sanger sequencing. Nucleotides in red are those used to anneal each DSB end, and are therefore present in only one copy in the genomic sequence. The extent of calculated deletions (Δ) is indicated in parentheses. Nucleotides in red in parentheses correspond to small deletions. Nucleotides in green correspond to insertions. The length of Ty insertions is indicated along with the LTR it comes from. Nucleotides in purple (SpCas9 at the ARG2 locus) correspond to the I-SceI site (see text). Nucleotides in light blue correspond to homeologies between the left and right junction sequences that were lost after deletion (the junction sequence shows the nucleotide in blue, not the one in red). Nucleotides in light blue in parentheses correspond to homeologies that were removed during the deletion. Note that extended homologies between LTRs does not always allow to determine the exact breakpoint with a high precision.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s001

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S2 Fig. Southern blot at the YAK1 locus.

The time course was run in non-induced (glucose) and induced (galactose) conditions, as previously. The uncut locus is clearly visible as a 2612 bp band, but no signal can be seen at the expected size for a DSB (2294 bp). Two fuzzy bands present in both conditions and corresponding to faint cross-hybridizations are indicated by asterisks. Note that even when the blot was overexposed no signal could be detected at the expected DSB size.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s002

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S3 Fig. Genome- wide mutation spectrum observed in haploid and diploid cells following Cas9 induction.

A: Real-time PCR quantification of CDC8 and JEM1 amounts relative to an internal control on chromosome IV, in diploid cells in which Cas9 was induced. Half the amount of CDC8 product was detected in each clone analyzed. This was significantly different from the amount of product amplified from the JEM1 gene located on the other chromosome X arm. B: Illumina results for diploid and haploid cells. For each clone, the number of mutations detected is shown. Substit.: nucleotide substitution; Indel: insertion or deletion; Indel micro.: insertion or deletion of one repeat unit in a microsatellite. The asterisk corresponds to a 36 bp deletion in the FLO11 minisatellite (36 bp repeat).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s003

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S4 Fig. Fate of a DSB made within a trinucleotide repeat tract using different endonucleases.

The DSB induced by I-SceI (A), a TALEN (B) or SpCas9 (C). In each case, survivors were separated in three different categories: deletions (local or large) around the repeat tract, removing partially or totally the repeat (left), repeat contraction without other mutation (right) or all other kinds of rearrangements (middle). Note that in A, five triplets flank the repeat tract on each side, whereas in B and C the break is made at the end of a long (80 triplets) repeat tract, leaving 1–4 triplets downstream and the remaining upstream the DSB.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s004

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S5 Fig. Western blots.

A: Western blots. Proteins were extracted in non-induced (Glu) and induced (Gal) conditions for wild type and each mutant strain. Glucose-6-phosphate deshydrogenase (G6PDH) was used as a loading control. B: Ratios of Cas9 over G6PDH signals, for each strain in each condition.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s005

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S1 Table. Off-target sites in the yeast genome, ranked by decreasing CFD score, using the CRISPOR tool.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s006

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S2 Table. List of strains used in the present study.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s007

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S3 Table. List and sequence of primers used in this study.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1008924.s008

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Acknowledgments

We thank Carine Giovannangeli for the generous gift of the Enhanced SpCas9 plasmid.

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