Correcting a patient-specific Rhodopsin mutation with adenine base editor in a mouse model.
Genome editing offers a great promise to treating human genetic diseases. To assess genome-editing-mediated therapeutic effects in vivo, an animal model is indispensable. The genomic disparities between mice and humans often impede the direct clinical application of genome-editing-mediated treatments using conventional mouse models. Thus, the generation of a mouse model with a humanized genomic segment containing a patient-specific mutation is highly sought after for translational research. In this study, we successfully developed a knockin mouse model for autosomal-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP), designated as hT17M knockin, which incorporates a 75-nucleotide DNA segment with the T17M mutation (Rhodopsin-c.C50T; p.T17M). This model demonstrated significant reductions in electroretinogram amplitudes and exhibited disruptions in retinal structure. Subsequently, we administered an adeno-associated virus vectors carrying an adenine base editor (ABE) and a single-guide RNA specifically targeting the T17M mutation, achieving a peak correction rate of 39.7% at the RNA level and significantly improving retinal function in ABE-injected mice. These findings underscore that the hT17M knockin mouse model recapitulates the clinical features of adRP patients and exhibits therapeutic effects with ABE-mediated treatments. It offers a promising avenue for the development of gene-editing therapies for RP.