Use of adenine base editing and homology-independent targeted integration strategies to correct the cystic fibrosis causing variant, W1282X

  • Karen Mention
  • , Kader Cavusoglu-Doran
  • , Anya T. Joynt
  • , Lúcia Santos
  • , David Sanz
  • , Alice C. Eastman
  • , Christian Merlo
  • , Elinor Langfelder-Schwind
  • , Martina F. Scallan
  • , Carlos M. Farinha
  • , Garry R. Cutting
  • , Neeraj Sharma
  • , Patrick T. Harrison

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Small molecule drugs known as modulators can treat ~90% of people with cystic fibrosis (CF), but do not work for premature termination codon variants such as W1282X (c.3846G>A). Here we evaluated two gene editing strategies, Adenine Base Editing (ABE) to correct W1282X, and Homology-Independent Targeted Integration (HITI) of a CFTR superexon comprising exons 23-27 (SE23-27) to enable expression of a CFTR mRNA without W1282X. In Flp-In-293 cells stably expressing a CFTR expression minigene bearing W1282X, ABE corrected 24% of W1282X alleles, rescued CFTR mRNA from nonsense mediated decay and restored protein expression. However, bystander editing at the adjacent adenine (c.3847A>G), caused an amino acid change (R1283G) that affects CFTR maturation and ablates ion channel activity. In primary human nasal epithelial cells homozygous for W1282X, ABE corrected 27% of alleles, but with a notably lower level of bystander editing, and CFTR channel function was restored to 16% of wild-Type levels. Using the HITI approach, correct integration of a SE23 27 in intron 22 of the CFTR locus in 16HBEge W1282X cells was detected in 5.8% of alleles, resulting in 7.8% of CFTR transcripts containing the SE23 27 sequence. Analysis of a clonal line homozygous for the HITI-SE23 27 produced full-length mature protein and restored CFTR anion channel activity to 10% of wild-Type levels, which could be increased three-fold upon treatment with the triple combination of CF modulators. Overall, these data demonstrate two different editing strategies can successfully correct W1282X, the second most common class I variant, with a concomitant restoration of CFTR function.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3237-3248
Number of pages12
JournalHuman Molecular Genetics
Volume32
Issue number23
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2023

Keywords

  • adenine base editing
  • CFTR
  • CRISPR
  • HITI
  • W1282X

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