Divergent PAM Specificity of a Highly-Similar SpCas9 Ortholog
RNA-guided DNA endonucleases of the CRISPR-Cas system are widely used for genome engineering and thus have numerous applications in a wide variety of fields. The range of sequences that CRISPR endonucleases can recognize, however, is constrained by the need for a specific protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) flanking the target site. In this study, we demonstrate the natural PAM plasticity of a highly-similar, yet previously uncharacterized, Cas9 fromStreptococcus canis(ScCas9) through rational manipulation of distinguishing motif insertions. To this end, we report a divergent affinity to 5’-NNGT-3’ PAM sequences and demonstrate the editing capabilities of the ortholog in both bacterial and human cells. Finally, we build an automated bioinformatics pipeline, the Search for PAMs by ALignment Of Targets (SPAMALOT), which further explores the microbial PAM diversity of otherwise-overlookedStreptococcusCas9 orthologs. Our results establish that ScCas9 can be utilized both as an alternative genome editing tool and as a functional platform to discover novelStreptococcusPAM specificities.