RRC ID 73033
Author Antoniou P, Hardouin G, Martinucci P, Frati G, Felix T, Chalumeau A, Fontana L, Martin J, Masson C, Brusson M, Maule G, Rosello M, Giovannangeli C, Abramowski V, de Villartay JP, Concordet JP, Del Bene F, El Nemer W, Amendola M, Cavazzana M, Cereseto A, Romano O, Miccio A.
Title Base-editing-mediated dissection of a γ-globin cis-regulatory element for the therapeutic reactivation of fetal hemoglobin expression.
Journal Nat Commun
Abstract Sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia affect the production of the adult β-hemoglobin chain. The clinical severity is lessened by mutations that cause fetal γ-globin expression in adult life (i.e., the hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin). Mutations clustering ~200 nucleotides upstream of the HBG transcriptional start sites either reduce binding of the LRF repressor or recruit the KLF1 activator. Here, we use base editing to generate a variety of mutations in the -200 region of the HBG promoters, including potent combinations of four to eight γ-globin-inducing mutations. Editing of patient hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells is safe, leads to fetal hemoglobin reactivation and rescues the pathological phenotype. Creation of a KLF1 activator binding site is the most potent strategy - even in long-term repopulating hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. Compared with a Cas9-nuclease approach, base editing avoids the generation of insertions, deletions and large genomic rearrangements and results in higher γ-globin levels. Our results demonstrate that base editing of HBG promoters is a safe, universal strategy for treating β-hemoglobinopathies.
Volume 13(1)
Pages 6618
Published 2022-11-4
DOI 10.1038/s41467-022-34493-1
PII 10.1038/s41467-022-34493-1
PMID 36333351
PMC PMC9636226
MeSH Anemia, Sickle Cell* / genetics Fetal Hemoglobin / genetics Fetal Hemoglobin / metabolism Hematopoietic Stem Cells / metabolism Humans beta-Thalassemia* / genetics beta-Thalassemia* / therapy gamma-Globins / genetics
IF 12.121
Resource
Human and Animal Cells HUDEP-2(RCB4557)