2017
DOI: 10.1126/science.aao0100
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A cyclic oligonucleotide signaling pathway in type III CRISPR-Cas systems

Abstract: Type III CRISPR-Cas systems in prokaryotes provide immunity against invading nucleic acids through the coordinated degradation of transcriptionally active DNA and its transcripts by the Csm effector complex. The Cas10 subunit of the complex contains an HD nuclease domain that is responsible for DNA degradation and two Palm domains with elusive functions. In addition, Csm6, a ribonuclease that is not part of the complex, is also required to provide full immunity. We show here that target RNA binding by the Csm … Show more

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Cited by 423 publications
(527 citation statements)
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“…Recent studies have revealed an immune mechanism in the Class 1 Type III–A system that parallels the target-activated collateral cleavage by Cas13 (Kazlauskiene et al, 2017; Niewoehner et al, 2017). In this system, the multi-subunit Csm effector complex binds RNA transcripts that match the guide crRNA.…”
Section: Type VI Crispr–cas Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent studies have revealed an immune mechanism in the Class 1 Type III–A system that parallels the target-activated collateral cleavage by Cas13 (Kazlauskiene et al, 2017; Niewoehner et al, 2017). In this system, the multi-subunit Csm effector complex binds RNA transcripts that match the guide crRNA.…”
Section: Type VI Crispr–cas Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future interkingdom microbial consortia design can also exploit the CRISPR-Cas systems, a microbial strategy to overcome 'invasions' by phages/viruses. While recent studies utilize CRISPR in monoculture systems (Donohoue et al, 2017), the new discovery of the signalling pathway between Cas and Csm complexes uncovered a future research direction of CRISPR regulation by controlling the signal messengers that activate the RNase activity (Kazlauskiene et al, 2017;Niewoehner et al, 2017). Although the CRISPR evolution and adaptation at the consortia level are still limited (Davison et al, 2016;Burstein et al, 2017), the manipulation of communication signals may be feasible in microbial consortia and further adapted to other biotechnological applications.…”
Section: Interkingdom Consortia Have Enhanced Tolerance Towards Extermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To increase the sensitivity of the SHERLOCK system, a two‐step signal amplification protocol was developed using two different CRISPR effectors. Collateral ssRNA degradation by the Type III RNAse effector Csm6 is activated by the production of key second messengers that can be generated by the activity of Cas13. Using two different fluorescent reporters in the same channel with specificity to Csm6 or Cas13a, the sensitivity of SHERLOCK 2 could be further improved reaching nearly single molecule detection …”
Section: Novel Crispr‐based Tools For Cancer Diagnosticsmentioning
confidence: 99%