Correction of diverse muscular dystrophy mutations in human engineered heart muscle by single-site genome editing

Genome editing with CRISPR/Cas9 is a promising new approach for correcting or mitigating disease-causing mutations. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is associated with lethal degeneration of cardiac and skeletal muscle caused by more than 3000 different mutations in the X-linked dystrophin gene ( )...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science advances 2018-01, Vol.4 (1), p.eaap9004
Hauptverfasser: Long, Chengzu, Li, Hui, Tiburcy, Malte, Rodriguez-Caycedo, Cristina, Kyrychenko, Viktoriia, Zhou, Huanyu, Zhang, Yu, Min, Yi-Li, Shelton, John M, Mammen, Pradeep P A, Liaw, Norman Y, Zimmermann, Wolfram-Hubertus, Bassel-Duby, Rhonda, Schneider, Jay W, Olson, Eric N
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Genome editing with CRISPR/Cas9 is a promising new approach for correcting or mitigating disease-causing mutations. Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is associated with lethal degeneration of cardiac and skeletal muscle caused by more than 3000 different mutations in the X-linked dystrophin gene ( ). Most of these mutations are clustered in "hotspots." There is a fortuitous correspondence between the eukaryotic splice acceptor and splice donor sequences and the protospacer adjacent motif sequences that govern prokaryotic CRISPR/Cas9 target gene recognition and cleavage. Taking advantage of this correspondence, we screened for optimal guide RNAs capable of introducing insertion/deletion (indel) mutations by nonhomologous end joining that abolish conserved RNA splice sites in 12 exons that potentially allow skipping of the most common mutant or out-of-frame exons within or nearby mutational hotspots. We refer to the correction of DMD mutations by exon skipping as myoediting. In proof-of-concept studies, we performed myoediting in representative induced pluripotent stem cells from multiple patients with large deletions, point mutations, or duplications within the gene and efficiently restored dystrophin protein expression in derivative cardiomyocytes. In three-dimensional engineered heart muscle (EHM), myoediting of DMD mutations restored dystrophin expression and the corresponding mechanical force of contraction. Correcting only a subset of cardiomyocytes (30 to 50%) was sufficient to rescue the mutant EHM phenotype to near-normal control levels. We conclude that abolishing conserved RNA splicing acceptor/donor sites and directing the splicing machinery to skip mutant or out-of-frame exons through myoediting allow correction of the cardiac abnormalities associated with DMD by eliminating the underlying genetic basis of the disease.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aap9004