| Literature DB >> 30794581 |
Haris Babačić1, Aditi Mehta2, Olivia Merkel2, Benedikt Schoser1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The system of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR-associated proteins (cas) is a new technology that allows easier manipulation of the genome. Its potential to edit genes opened a new door in treatment development for incurable neurological monogenic diseases (NMGDs). The aim of this systematic review was to summarise the findings on the current development of CRISPR-cas for therapeutic purposes in the most frequent NMGDs and provide critical assessment. METHODS AND DATA ACQUISITION: We searched the MEDLINE and EMBASE databases, looking for original studies on the use of CRISPR-cas to edit pathogenic variants in models of the most frequent NMGDs, until end of 2017. We included all the studies that met the following criteria: 1. Peer-reviewed study report with explicitly described experimental designs; 2. In vitro, ex vivo, or in vivo study using human or other animal biological systems (including cells, tissues, organs, organisms); 3. focusing on CRISPR as the gene-editing method of choice; and 5. featured at least one NMGD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30794581 PMCID: PMC6386526 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0212198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Genome editing with CRISPR-cas9.
On the right—schematic depiction of genome-editing with CRISPR-cas. After delivering the CRISPR components, during the G1/S phase of the cell cycle: 1. The gRNA (DNA-binding-domain) binds the target sequence within the genome; 2. This gRNA-DNA complex is specifically recognised by the cas9 protein (the effector domain), which induces a double-stranded break in the DNA; 3. Genome modification occurs, mainly through activating one of the two DNA repair mechanisms: non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) or homology directed repair (HDR). NHEJ introduces insertions or deletions within a sequence, whereas HDR requires delivery of a donor sequence that through recombination with the targeting sequence can lead to point mutations or insertions. On the left–different delivery methods are used to deliver the CRISPR-cas9 components: viral and non-viral. Viral methods are usually more efficient but raise concerns such as immunogenicity.
Fig 2PRISMA flow diagram for the systematic review.
Fig 3Number of CRISPR publications: A. per year; B. per disease type. Abbreviations: DMD–Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy, HD–Huntington’s disease, DM–myotonic dystrophy, SCA–spinocerebellar ataxia, FXS–fragile X syndrome, FRDA–Friedreich’s ataxia, FSHD–facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, LGMD–limb-girdle muscular dystrophy.
Overview of the studies on Duchenne’s muscular dystrophy included in the systematic review.
| Authors | Year | Disease | Origin of model | Delivery to cells | Key-point(s): |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amoasi | 2017 | DMD | AAV 9 | New mouse model: | |
| Bengtsson | 2017 | DMD | EP, AAV 6 | Excised exon 52&53. Dual-, compared to single-, vector delivery was more efficient | |
| Duchene | 2018 | DMD | H | LF 2000 | Protocol for |
| Ehrke-Schulz | 2017 | DMD | H | HC-AdV | Designed a new viral system (HC-Adv), with a large delivering capacity (35 kb) |
| El Refaey | 2017 | DMD | EP, AAV rh74 | Demonstrated functional improvement in cardiac contractility (papillary muscle) | |
| Iyombe-Engembe | 2016 | DMD | H, hDMD/ | LF 2000, EP | Deleted exons 51–53, creating a hybrid exon 50–54 in mice that contain human |
| Kyrychenko | 2017 | DMD | H | NF | Editing the ABD-1 domain showed improvement in functionality of cardiomyocytes |
| Lattanzi | 2017 | DMD | H | LV | Demonstrated a strategy for editing the exon 2 duplication using one gRNA |
| Lee | 2017 | DMD | CGNP | Induced HDR, delivering the CRISPR components with new Gold-nanoparticles. | |
| Li | 2015 | DMD | H | EP | Exon 44 skipping, frameshifting, and knockin. Knockin restored full protein length |
| Liao | 2017 | DMD | AAV 9 | Epigenetically up-regulated expression of utrophin, using dead cas9 (dCas9-VP160) | |
| Long | 2014 | DMD | MI | Germline editing in mice produced mosaic animals with 2–100% | |
| Long | 2016 | DMD | AAV 9 | Different modes of AAV 9 delivery show varying efficiency in restoring dystrophin | |
| Maggio | 2016 | DMD | H | AdV | Excised a large region encompassing exons 44–54, covering many mutations |
| Maggio | 2016 | DMD | H | AdV | Explored editing strategies, using CRISPR-cas alone and combined with TALENs |
| Mou | 2017 | DMD | M | LV | Used single gRNA skipping of exon 23 in C2C12 mouse cells. |
| Nelson | 2016 | DMD | AAV 8 | Deletion of exon 23 improved muscle function in both adult and neonatal mice | |
| Ousterout | 2015 | DMD | H in M | LF & EP | Edited patient myoblasts, engrafted in immunodeficient mice, restored dystrophin |
| Perrin | 2017 | DMD | TransfeX, LF & EP | Increased the expression of Laminin subunit α1, using dCas9-VP160 | |
| Tabebordbar | 2016 | DMD | AAV 9 | Gene modifications possible in terminally differentiated muscle cells | |
| Wojtal | 2016 | DMD | H | EP | Increased the expression of utrophin, using dCas9-VP160 |
| Xu | 2016 | DMD | EP, AdV | Deletion of exons 21–23 improved sarcolemal integrity in skeletal muscle cells | |
| Young | 2016 | DMD | H in NSG- | NF | Deletion of 725 kb, encompassing exons 45–55, restored dystrophin in muscle cells |
| Zhang | 2017 | DMD | H, mdx M | NF and MI | Used a new endonuclease (cpf1) for |
| Zhu | 2017 | DMD | LF 3000, AdV | Developed a fibrin gel to propagate CRISPR-cas9-corrected muscle stem cells |
* Concept proven in vitro.
† Concept proven in vivo.
‡ Concept proven ex vivo.
Abbreviations: H–human, M–mouse, mdx–mouse model of DMD, AdV–Adenovirus, AAV–Adeno-associated virus, LF–Lipofectamine, PEI–Polyethylenimine, CGBP–CRISPR-Gold nanoparticles, LF–Lipofectamine, EP–Electroporation, NF–Nucleofection, HC-AdV–High-capacity adenoviral vectors, MI–Microinjection.
Overview of the studies on other monogenic neurological diseases included in the systematic review.
| Authors | Year | Disease | Origin of model | Delivery to cells | Key-point(s): |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kolli | 2017 | HD | LV | Excised | |
| Monteys | 2017 | HD | H, | LF, EP, AAV | Reduced human |
| Shin | 2016 | HD | H | EP | Patient-specific inactivation of the mutant haplotype in patient-derived cells. |
| Xu | 2017 | HD | H | NF | Editing of the |
| Yang | 2017 | HD | AAV | Treated 9-month old mice had reversal of neuropathology and behavioural changes | |
| Marthaler | 2016 | SCA2 | H | NF | Replaced the CAG-expanded |
| Marthaler | 2016 | SCA2 | H | NF | Correction of another model of SCA2—iPSC line H195 |
| Marthaler | 2016 | SCA2 | H | NF | Correction of another model of SCA2 –iPSC line H266 |
| Ouellet | 2017 | FRDA | LF, EP | Removal of repeats expansion reduced | |
| Park | 2015 | FXS | H | EP | Single gRNA-targeting of the CGG repeat led to excision of the mutation in iPSCs |
| Xie | 2016 | FXS | H | LF 3000, NF | Dual cleavage of the CGG repeats within the |
| Turan | 2016 | LGMD | H | NF | CRISPR-cas9-ssODN-mediated HDR of point mutations in LGMD2B & LGMD2D |
| Himeda | 2016 | FSHMD | H | LV | Used dCas9 fused to transcriptional effectors for |
| Kemaladewi | 2017 | MDC1A | AAV 9 | ||
| van Agtmaal | 2017 | DM1 | H, M | NF | Excision of the expanded |
| Pinto | 2017 | DM1 | H, HSALR M | AAV | dCas9 regulation of mRNAexp transcription improved myotonia in treated mice |
| Batra | 2017 | DM1 | H, Mnk | LF 3000, LV | dCas9-cleavage of mRNAexp removed ribonuclear foci and corrected mis-splicing |
* Concept proven in vitro
† Concept proven in vivo
Abbreviations: H–human, M–mouse, Mnk–African green monkey, YAC128, BacHD, HD140Q-KI–mouse models of HD, YG8R, YG8sR–mouse models of FRDA, dy/dy –mouse model of MDC1A, HSA–mouse model of DM1, AAV–Adeno-associated virus, LF–Lipofectamine, EP–Electroporation, NF–Nucleofection, LV–Lentivirus.
Overview on CRISPR-cas editing strategies and outcome assessment for in vivo studies in animal models.
| Authors | Disease | Route of | Editing Strategy | Off-target assessment | Off-target events (OTEs) | Outcome RNA assessment | Outcome | Improved functional outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amoasi | DMD | I.M., I.P. | sgRNA, cas9 | T7E1 assay, deep sequencing | no OTEs in top 6 predicted loci | n.r. | WB, IHC | histopathology, grip strength test. |
| Bengtsson | DMD | I.M., R.O. | single vs. two gRNAs, cas9 | deep sequencing | <1% in top 5 predicted loci | RT-PCR | WB, IHC | localization of nNOS, muscle force generation. |
| El-Refaey | DMD | R.O., I.P., I.V. | two gRNAs, cas9 | n.r. | n.r. | RT-PCR | WB, IHC | fibrosis reduction, contractility of papillary muscles. |
| Liao | DMD | I.M. | sgRNA, | n.r. | n.r. | qRT-PCR | IHC | muscle mass, grip strength test. |
| Long | DMD | I.M., R.O., I.P. | two gRNAs, cas9 | T7E1 assay | no OTEs in top 10 predicted loci | RT-PCR | WB, IHC | histopathology, serum CK, grip strength test. |
| Iyombe-Engembe | DMD | I.M. | two gRNAs, cas9 | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | WB | n.r. |
| Lee | DMD | I.M. | sgRNA, cas9, template (HDR) | deep sequencing | 0.005–0.2% in top predicted loci | n.r. | WB, IHC | histopathology, four-limb hanging test. |
| Nelson | DMD | I.M, I.P., I.V. | two gRNAs, cas9 | deep sequencing | < = 1% | RT-PCR, ddPCR | WB, IHC | localization of nNOS, muscle force, resistance to muscle damage. |
| Tabebordbar et al. (2016) [ | DMD | I.M, I.P. | two gRNAs, cas9 | next-generation sequencing | <0.1% in top 8 predicted loci | RT-PCR, Taqman-RT-PCR | WB, capillary immunoassay, IHC | histopathology, muscle force generation. |
| Xu et al. (2016) [ | DMD | I.M. | two gRNAs, cas9 | n.r. | n.r. | qRT-PCR | WB, IHC | sarcolemmal proteins’ localization, myofiber damage after stress. |
| Zhang et al. (2017) [ | DMD | C&Pn | single vs. two gRNAs, cpf1 (germline) | T7E1 assay, capillary electrophoresis | no OTEs in top 10 predicted loci | RT-PCR | WB, IHC | serum CK, grip strength test. |
| Long | DMD | C&Pn | sgRNA, cas9, template | deep sequencing | <2.5% in top 10 predicted loci | n.r. | WB, IHC | Histopathology, serum CK, grip strength test. |
aav—adeno-associated virus
adv–adenovirus
ep–electroporation
np–nanoparticles
mi–microinjection.
† Primary outcome of interest for DMD in these studies was increased expression of dystrophin.
Abbreviations: I.M.—intramuscular, I.P.—intraperitoneal, R.O.—retroorbital, I.V.–intravenous, C&Pn–cytoplasmic and pronuclear, nNOS—neuronal nitric oxide synthase, CK—creatine kinase, IHC—immunohistochemistry, WB—Western blot, RT-PCR—real-time polymerase chain reaction, qRT-PCR—quantitative RT-PCR, IF–immunofluorescence, n.r.—not reported, sgRNA–single gRNA
Overview on CRISPR-cas editing strategies, off-target and outcome assessment for in vivo studies in animal models (continued).
| Authors | Disease | Route of | Editing Strategy | Off-target assessment | Off-target events (OTEs) | Outcome RNA assessment | Outcome | Improved functional outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perrin et al. (2017) [ | DMD | I.M. | sgRNA, | qRT-PCR | no OTEs in top 8 predicted loci | qRT-PCR | WB, IHC | Lama1 gene expression induction. |
| Monteys | HD | injected in one striatum side | sgRNA, cas9 | Sanger sequencing | no OTEs in top 11 predicted loci | qRT-PCR | WB | n.r. |
| Yang et al. (2017) [ | HD | injected in both striatum sides | two gRNAs, cas9 | whole genome sequencing | rare OTEs | n.r. | WB, IHC | histopathology, rotarod and balance beam test, grip strength test. |
| Ouellet et al. (2017) [ | FRDA | I.M. | two gRNAs, cas9 | n.r. | n.r. | qRT-PCR | WB | n.r. |
| Kemaladewi et al. (2017) [ | MDC1A | I.M., I.P, I.V. | two gRNAs, cas9 | T7E1 assay | no OTEs in top 20 predicted loci | RT–PCR, qPCR, ddPCR | WB, IHC | histopathology, open-field activity test, muscle force generation, |
| Pinto et al. (2017) [ | DM1 | I.V. | sgRNA, dead cas9 | RNA sequencing | negligible | FISH | WB, IF | ribonuclear foci, myotonia (electromyography assessment) |
aav—adeno-associated virus
ep–electroporation.
† Primary outcomes of interest for HD, FRDA, MDC1A, and DM1 were decreased expression of huntingtin, restoration of frataxin, restoration of Lama2 protein, and reduction in RNA foci, respectively.
Abbreviations: I.M.—intramuscular, I.P.—intraperitoneal, I.V.–intravenous, IHC—immunohistochemistry, WB—Western blot, RT-PCR—real-time polymerase chain reaction, qRT-PCR—quantitative RT-PCR, FISH- fluorescent in situ hybridisation, IF–immunofluorescence, ddPCR—digital drop PCR, n.r.—not reported, sgRNA–single gRNA
Fig 4Pathophysiology of the most frequent NMGDs and CRISPR-cas strategies for treatment.
A. Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is caused by mutations in the DMD gene, located on chromosome X. Mutations which lead to the formation of dysfunctional dystrophin causes the typical childhood-onset disease with severe muscular weakness and wasting, leading to death in the adolescent age. Mutations that allow the expression of a functional but shorter dystrophin cause a less severe phenotype of the disease known as Becker’s Muscular Dystrophy (BMD). Two CRISPR-cas9 strategies have been explored so far: 1. deletion of exons where the DMD mutation is located, which leads to BMD-like dystrophin expression and phenotype in mice; 2. HDR-mediated knockin that has low efficiency. B. Myotonic Dystrophy type 1 (DM1) is caused by a CTG nucleotide repeat expansion in the DMPK gene. An elongated transcribed mRNA shows toxic effects in the cells due to mis-splicing of proteins, which leads to myotonia, muscular wasting (see a schematic depiction of a typical phenotype in a boy with congenital DM1), and endocrine disorders. Authors report successful deletion of the CTG repeat expansion with CRISPR-cas9 and transcriptional downregulation of the toxic mRNA with dCas9. C. Huntington’s Disease (HD) is a CAG nucleotide repeat expansion disease. Mutation in the HTT gene leads to a systemic accumulation of an elongated HTT protein. The accumulation in the striatum of the brain gives the typical triad of symptoms: chorea, psychiatric disorders, and cognitive impairment. Studies show reversal of the neurotoxic effects after CRISPR-cas9-induced silencing of the mHTT in mice.