| Literature DB >> 28198371 |
Haixia Gong1,2, Menglin Liu1,2, Jeff Klomp1,2, Bradley J Merrill3,4, Jalees Rehman1,2,5, Asrar B Malik1,2.
Abstract
Human endothelial cells (ECs) are widely used to study mechanisms of angiogenesis, inflammation, and endothelial permeability. Targeted gene disruption induced by Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR)-CRISPR-Associated Protein 9 (Cas9) nuclease gene editing is potentially an important tool for definitively establishing the functional roles of individual genes in ECs. We showed that co-delivery of adenovirus encoding EGFP-tagged Cas9 and lentivirus encoding a single guide RNA (sgRNA) in primary human lung microvascular ECs (HLMVECs) disrupted the expression of the Tie2 gene and protein. Tie2 disruption increased basal endothelial permeability and prevented permeability recovery following injury induced by the inflammatory stimulus thrombin. Thus, gene deletion via viral co-delivery of CRISPR-Cas9 in primary human ECs provides a novel platform to investigate signaling mechanisms of normal and perturbed EC function without the need for clonal expansion.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28198371 PMCID: PMC5309830 DOI: 10.1038/srep42127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Deletion of Tie2 gene in primary ECs using CRISPR-Cas9.
(A) Cultured primary HLMVECs were transduced by EGFP-Cas9 adenovirus and sgRNA lentivirus targeting on Tie2 and subjected to flow cytometry analysis of EGFP expression. In a separate study, HLMVECs were transduced by GFP lentivirus and subjected to flow cytometry analysis of EGFP expression as an indicator of lentivirus transduction efficiency. (B) Protein expression of Tie2 in vector control and Tie2 knockout HLMVECs induced by CRISPR-Cas9 was determined by immunoblotting. Overexpression of mouse Tie2 in Tie2−/− HLMVECs was determined to assess the ability to rescue Tie2 expression after deletion. The uncropped full-length gels can be found in Supplementary Fig. S1. (C) Quantification of Tie2 protein expression from 3 independent experiments. sgRNA Tie2-1 and sgRNA Tie2-2 are CRISPR-Cas9-mediated deletions of Tie-2 at two distinction domains of Tie2 (two different sgRNAs). HuTie2KO1 and HuTie2KO2 + mTie2 represent restoration of Tie-2 expression in cells having undergone Tie-2 deletion. Differences were calculated using one-way ANOVA. P values less than 0.05 are indicated in the graph. (D) T7E1 assay detecting mutation on HLMVECs edited by CRISPR-Cas9 with Tie2 sgRNAs as showing a series of bands. Wild-types cells with or without Cas9 or vector only show single bands (negative controls).
Figure 2Analysis of CRISPR-Cas9 induced Tie2 gene mutations using next-generation sequencing.
(A) Indel size distribution of wild-type cells (control) and cells transduced with two different sgRNAs targeting Tie2 (sgRNA Tie2-1, sgRNA Tie2-2). (B) NHEJ reads with insertions, deletions, and substitutions were mapped to reference amplicon position. Sequencing/alignment errors (green lines) can be distinguished from indels by their similar positions in all three samples. (C) Frameshift mutagenesis profile and predicted Cas9 cleavage site. Unmodified reads are excluded from this analysis. sgRNA Tie2-1 and sgRNA Tie2-2 showed different percentage of reads with mutations from frameshift, in frame, and in noncoding region. (D) Predicted impacts on splice sites. Potential splice sites modified refers to the reads in which either of the two introns adjacent to the exon is disrupted. (E) The relative contributions of potentially disruptive coding region mutations (indels) and non-coding region mutations (5′ splice site) were quantified across 3 passages. SNPs, in-frame indels, indels less than 5 residues, and 3′ splice site mutations were excluded.
Figure 3Tie2 deletion by CRISPR-Cas9 in primary ECs increases endothelial permeability and mitigates recovery of permeability in response to thrombin challenge.
(A) Basal TER and post-thrombin (1 U/ml) TER were studied in confluent control, Tie2-deleted HLMVECs and mTie2 overexpressing cells in which Tie2 had been deleted. Absolute TER values were reduced in both Tie2-deleted groups as compared to control ECs at basal condition. mTie2 overexpression successfully rescued the basal leakiness. (B) Quantification of TER values of wild-type (control), transduced cells (sgRNA Tie2-1, sgRNA Tie2-2) and rescued cells (HuTie2KO + mTie2) at basal (−1 h), thrombin-stimulated (0.5 h) and post-recovery (3 h) condition. Differences were calculated using two-way ANOVA. P values less than 0.05 are indicated in the graph. n = 3. (C) Serum-starved confluent control or Tie2-deleted HLMVECs were challenged by PBS or 1 U/ml of thrombin, and subjected for VE-cadherin immunostaining at the indicated time-points and analyzed by confocal microscopy. The marked disruption of VE-cadherin junctions seen in wild-type HLMVEC monolayer (control) at the 30 min post thrombin (white arrows) was reversed by 2 h; however, the defective VE-cadherin junctions were present in Tie2-deleted HLMVECs 2 h post-thrombin. White arrows are used to identify areas of adherens junction disruption where neighboring cells lack cell membrane localization of VE-cadherin. Results are representative of 3 independent experiments.