In vivo HSC prime editing rescues Sickle Cell Disease in a mouse model

Author:

Li Chang1,Georgakopoulou Aphrodite2,Newby Gregory A3,Chen Peter J3ORCID,Everette Kelcee A3ORCID,Paschoudi Kiriaki4,Vlachaki EfthimiaORCID,Gil Sucheol1,Anderson Anna K1,Koob Theodore1,Huang Lishan1ORCID,Wang Hongjie1,Kiem Hans-Peter5ORCID,Liu David R3,Yannaki Evangelia6,Lieber André1

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States

2. George Papanicolaou Hospital, Greece

3. Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

4. G. Papanicolaou Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece

5. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center and the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States

6. George Papanicolaou Hospital, Thessaloniki, Greece

Abstract

Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is a monogenic disease caused by a nucleotide mutation in the β-globin gene. Current gene therapy studies are mainly focused on lentivirus vector-mediated gene addition or CRISPR/Cas9-mediated fetal globin reactivation, leaving the root cause unfixed. We developed a vectorized prime editing system that can directly repair the SCD mutation in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in vivo in a SCD mouse model (CD46/Townes mice). Our approach involved a single intravenous injection of a non-integrating, prime editor-expressing virus vector into mobilized CD46/Townes mice and low-dose drug selection in vivo. This procedure resulted in the correction of ~40% of bS alleles in HSCs. On average 43% of HbS was replaced by HbA thereby greatly mitigating the SCD phenotypes. Transplantation in secondary recipients demonstrated that long-term repopulating HSCs were edited. Highly efficient target site editing was achieved with minimal generation of insertions and deletions and no detectable off-target editing. Because of its simplicity and portability, our in vivo prime editing approach has the potential for application in resource-poor countries where SCD is prevalent.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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