A differentiated β-globin gene replacement strategy uses heterologous introns to restore physiological expression.

Journal: Molecular Therapy : The Journal Of The American Society Of Gene Therapy
Published:
Abstract

β-Hemoglobinopathies are common monogenic disorders. In sickle cell disease (SCD), a single mutation in the β-globin (HBB) gene results in dysfunctional hemoglobin protein, while in β-thalassemia, over 300 mutations distributed across the gene reduce β-globin levels and cause severe anemia. Genetic engineering replacing the whole HBB gene through homology-directed repair (HDR) is an ideal strategy to restore a benign genotype and rescue HBB expression for most genotypes. However, this is technically challenging because (1) the insert must not be homologous to the endogenous gene and (2) synonymous codon-optimized, intron-less sequences may not reconstitute adequate β-globin levels. Here, we developed an HBB gene replacement strategy using CRISPR-Cas9 that successfully addresses these challenges. We determined that a DNA donor containing a diverged HBB coding sequence and heterologous introns to avoid sequence homology provides proper physiological expression. We identified a DNA donor that uses truncated γ-globin introns, results in 34% HDR, and rescues β-globin expression in in vitro models of SCD and β-thalassemia in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). Furthermore, while HDR allele frequency dropped in vivo, it was maintained at ∼15%, demonstrating editing of long-term repopulating HSPCs. In summary, our HBB gene replacement strategy offers a differentiated approach by restoring naturally regulated adult hemoglobin expression.

Authors
Kirby Wallace, Trevor Gerstenberg, Craig Ennis, Juan Perez Bermejo, James Partridge, Christopher Bandoro, William Matern, Gaia Andreoletti, Kristina Krassovsky, Shaheen Kabir, Cassandra Lalisan, Aishwarya Churi, Glen Chew, Lana Corbo, Jon Vincelette, Timothy Klasson, Brian Silva, Yuri Strukov, B Quejarro, Kaisle Hill, Sebastian Treusch, Jane Grogan, Daniel Dever, Matthew Porteus, Beeke Wienert