| Literature DB >> 32198625 |
Hua Alexander Han1, Jeremy Kah Sheng Pang1,2, Boon-Seng Soh3,4,5.
Abstract
The rapid advancement of genome editing technologies has opened up new possibilities in the field of medicine. Nuclease-based techniques such as the CRISPR/Cas9 system are now used to target genetically linked disorders that were previously hard-to-treat. The CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing approach wields several advantages over its contemporary editing systems, notably in the ease of component design, implementation and the option of multiplex genome editing. While results from the early phase clinical trials have been encouraging, the small patient population recruited into these trials hinders a conclusive assessment on the safety aspects of the CRISPR/Cas9 therapy. Potential safety concerns include the lack of fidelity in the CRISPR/Cas9 system which may lead to unintended DNA modifications at non-targeted gene loci. This review focuses modifications to the CRISPR/Cas9 components that can mitigate off-target effects in in vitro and preclinical models and its translatability to gene therapy in patient populations.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; Clinical trials; Gene therapy; In vivo; Off-target effects
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32198625 PMCID: PMC7220873 DOI: 10.1007/s00109-020-01893-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Med (Berl) ISSN: 0946-2716 Impact factor: 4.599
Fig. 1Graphical outline of the review article and overview of the mitigating techniques that can be applied to minimise OTEs in CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing
Fig. 2Stagewise schematic representations of target site recognition in CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome editing with modifications to the sgRNA and Cas9 endonuclease to reduce OTEs. a The Cas9 endonuclease first scans the genomic DNA and binds to canonical PAM sequences (I). This induces a structural change in the sgRNA that allows the guide sequence to search and hybridise to complementary target sites upstream of the PAM (II). sgRNA-DNA hybridisation activates the Cas9 nuclease domains which then cleaves both strands of DNA (III). b sgRNA can be truncated at the 5′-end by 2–3 nucleotides or c modified at the 5′-end to contain 2 guanine nucleotides to improve the specificity of the guide sequence. d Cas9 nickase with only 1 active catalytic domain can be paired and e catalytically deactivated Cas9 fused to FokI nuclease that requires dimerisation for nuclease activity can be used to minimise off-target indels (insertion/deletion). f Base editors that convert a single cytosine base to thymine without requiring DSBs are less promiscuous at off-target sites. g Cas9 orthologs from other bacteria such as SaCas9 and h other Cas nucleases such as Cas12a that recognises alternative PAMs can be used to target novel DNA sequences and improve specificity
List of natural-occurring and engineered Cas endonucleases.
| Cas Protein | Modifications | Remarks on OTEs | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| SpCas9 nickase | D10A mutation to deactivate RuvC nuclease domain of SpCas9 | Reduction of OTE by 100 to 1500 folds compared to wild-type SpCas9 while maintaining similar on-target efficiency | [ |
| dSpCas9- | Fusion of deactivated SpCas9 protein to catalytic domain of | Specificity of dSpCas9- | [ |
| C˃T Base editor | Fusion of SpCas9 HNH nickase to rat APOBEC1 cytidine deaminase enzyme and UGI | Comparing specificities of wild-type SpCas9 to C>T base editors at 7 target loci: | [ |
| A>G Base editor | Fusion of catalytically deactivated SpCas9 to | Specificities of the A>G base editor were analysed by EndoV-seq at 8 target loci: | [ |
| SpCas9-HF1 | Point mutations in SpCas9 at N497A, R661A, Q695A, Q926A | The GUIDE-seq technique was used to evaluate off-target effects at | [ |
| eSpCas9(1.1) | Point mutations in SpCas9 at K848A, K1003A and R1060A | Specificity of eSpCas9(1.1) was examined at the Using BLESS analysis to evaluate specificity at | [ |
| HypaCas9 | Point mutations in SpCas9 at N692A, M694A, Q695A, H698A | GUIDE-seq analysis was performed to determine specificity at 6 loci: HypaCas9 also induced lower OTEs than SpCas9-HF1 and eSpCas9(1.1) at the | [ |
| evoCas9 | Point mutations in REC3 domain of SpCas9 at M495V, Y515N, K526E, R661Q | GUIDE-seq analysis was performed to determined the specificity of evoCas9 at 8 loci: Targeted deep sequencing of the | [ |
| xCas9(3.7) | Multiple point mutations in SpCas9 | Guide-seq data revealed that the number of off-target events induced by xCas9(3.7) were significantly lower than wild-type SpCas9 at all of the 8 target loci: In particular, the ratio for the | [ |
| VRQR-SpCas9 | Point mutations in PAM-interacting domain of SpCas9 at D1135V, G1218R, R1335Q, T1337R | GUIDE-seq analysis was performed at 8 targeted loci: | [ |
| VRER-SpCas9 | Point mutations in PAM-interacting domain of SpCas9 at D1135V, G1218R, R1335E, T1337R | GUIDE-seq analysis was performed at 5 targeted loci: | [ |
| SaCas9 | Cas9 nuclease from | GUIDE-seq analysis was used to evaluate SaCas9 specificity at the | [ |
| Cas12a | Cas12a nuclease from | Digenome-seq was used to compared genome-wide specificity of Cas12a to SpCas9 with 2 Cas9 sgRNAs that target the 2 Cas12a sites at the ratios for AsCas12a were 0.267 & 0.024 and 0.005 & 0.012 for LbCas12a. In contrast, the ratio for SpCas9 was >2.0. | [ |
List of cell-type-specific promoters for in vivo genome editing
| Promoter | Tissue/cell type | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| hSYN1 | Neuron | [ |
| Aldh1L1 | Astrocyte | [ |
cTnT α-MHC | Cardiomyocyte | [ [ |
| SP-C | Pulmonary alveolar type II cell | [ |
| MUC2 | Intestinal goblet cell | [ |
| Ksp-cadherin | Renal tubular epithelial cell | [ |
| Albumin | Hepatocyte | [ |
| HSA | Skeletal muscle | [ |
| Insulin | Pancreatic beta cell | [ |
Rhodopsin Cone-opsin | Retinal rod cell Retinal cone cell | [ |