| Literature DB >> 28128770 |
Tuyana B Malankhanova1,2,3,4, Anastasia A Malakhova1,3,4, Sergey P Medvedev1,2,3,4, Suren M Zakian1,2,3,4.
Abstract
The development of new revolutionary technologies for directed gene editing has made it possible to thoroughly model and study NgAgo human diseases at the cellular and molecular levels. Gene editing tools like ZFN, TALEN, CRISPR-based systems, NgAgo and SGN can introduce different modifications. In gene sequences and regulate gene expression in different types of cells including induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These tools can be successfully used for Huntington's disease (HD) modeling, for example, to generate isogenic cell lines bearing different numbers of CAG repeats or to correct the mutation causing the disease. This review presents common genome editing technologies and summarizes the progress made in using them in HD and other hereditary diseases. Furthermore, we will discuss prospects and limitations of genome editing in understanding HD pathology.Entities:
Keywords: Genome editing tools; Huntington’s disease; disease modeling; induced pluripotent stem cells; isogenic cell lines
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28128770 PMCID: PMC5389024 DOI: 10.3233/JHD-160222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Huntingtons Dis ISSN: 1879-6397
Fig.1Table of gene editing tools survey for disease modeling. Advantages of the tools are marked in green frames.
Fig.2Generation of isogenic cell line panel with various numbers of CAG repeats using gene editing tools.
Gene editing tools for targeted epigenome modifications
| Alteration in DNA methylation | |||
| ZFN-based DNA methylases and demethylases | M.HhaI+ZFN | No evidence of specificity | [ |
| M.EcoHK31I+ZFN | Low specificity at higher expression levels of M.EcoHK31I+ZFN | [ | |
| M.HhaI+ZFN | Upgraded tool with high efficiency (∼60%) and undetectable levels of methylation at a non-target sites | [ | |
| M.SssI+ZFN | High levels of CpG methylation at the target site (up to ∼80%) and nearly unobservable levels of methylation at off-target sites (<1%) | [ | |
| Dnmt3a+ZFN | Targeted methylation of HSV-1 (herpes simplex virus-1) IE175k promoter and reduction of HSV-1 titer during HSV-1 lytic infection | [ | |
| Dnmt3a+ZFN | Specifically increased methylation of the EpCAM promoter in SKOV3 cells from 4–8% in untreated cells to 30%. Specific for the target region. Hypermethylated EpCAM promoter showed a 60–80% reduction of EpCAM expression (mRNA level and decreased proliferation rate) | [ | |
| TET1+ZFN | Reactivation of originally epigenetically silenced | [ | |
| TALE-based DNA methylases and demethylases | DNMT3A+TALE | Specific methylation of the targeted gene locus in human cells. Methylation of | [ |
| Methylation of | [ | ||
| TET1+TALE | Increased expression of the | [ | |
| Demethylation of | [ | ||
| CRISPR-based DNA methylases and demethylases | DNMT3A+CRISPR | Decrease in | [ |
| TET1+CRISPR | Significant upregulation of | [ | |
| Upregulation of | [ | ||
| TALE-based histone effectors | epiTALEs carrying histone methyltransferase and histone deacetylase domains | In primary neurons and Neuro 2a cells, levels of H3K9me1, H4K20me3, H3K27me3, H3K9ac, and H4K8ac were altered | [ |
| LSD1+TALE | Efficient demethylaton of a candidate enhancer in the stem cell leukemia locus in K562 erythroleukemia cells, without affecting control regions. Inactivation of enhancer chromatin by TALE-LSD1 frequently results in down-regulation of proximal genes, indicating target genes of enhancer | [ | |
| CRISPR-based histone effectors | p300+CRISPR | Highly specific acetylation of histone H3 lysine 27 at target sites and following transcriptional activation of target genes from promoters and both proximal and distal enhancers | [ |