| Literature DB >> 34717671 |
Alex Cho1, Elena N Huang1, Jin-A Lee2, Yiming Xu1, Henry Quach1, Jim Hu1,3, Amy P Wong4,5.
Abstract
The discovery of the Cystic fibrosis (CF) gene in 1989 has paved the way for incredible progress in treating the disease such that the mean survival age of individuals living with CF is now ~58 years in Canada. Recent developments in gene targeting tools and new cell and animal models have re-ignited the search for a permanent genetic cure for all CF. In this review, we highlight some of the more recent gene therapy approaches as well as new models that will provide insight into personalized therapies for CF.Entities:
Keywords: Alternative chloride channels; CFTR; Cystic fibrosis; Lung; Organoids; Precision medicine; Stem cells; TMEM16A
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34717671 PMCID: PMC8556969 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-021-03099-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Classes of CFTR variants and CFTR modulators and the impact it has in CFTR expression and processing
Advantages and disadvantages of gene editing tools
| ZFN | TALEN | CRISPR/Cas9 | Base Editing | Prime editing | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Type IIs restriction enzyme, FokI endonuclease, fused to pair of ZFN DNA binding domains Recognize 18-36 bp of DNA sequence Target DNA sequence break by protein-DNA interaction | Type IIs restriction enzyme, FokI endonuclease, fused to pair of TALEN DNA binding domains Recognize 30-40 bp of DNA sequence Target DNA sequence break by protein-DNA interaction | Few Cas endonuclease options for broader specificity and flexibility (Cas9, Cas12) PAM sequence require to design sgRNA Target DNA sequence break by DNA-RNA interaction | Direct conversion of a DNA base to another without DSBs at a target locus Permanent conversion of C-G to T-A base pairs by cytosin base editor (CBEs) Enzymatically convert A-T base pairs into G-C base pairs by adenine base editors (ABEs) | Fusion complex composed of a catalytically impaired Cas9 protein and an engineered reverse transcriptase Can recognize DNA of any sequence size |
| Efficiency | Low | Low | High | High | High |
| Advantages | Currently being used in clinical trials for HIV and Hunter’s syndrome Low immunity and Small protein size | Target any DNA sequence Less cytotoxic effects | Highly predictable target sequence Easy to design and possible to target only 1 bp of target sequence Potentially target multiple genes simultaneously | No random insertion and deletions because do not require DNA break High A > G and C > T conversion | No random insertion and deletions because do not require DNA break Can be used to generate different mutation types (insertions, deletions, and point mutations) |
| Limitations | Difficult due to extensive cloning needed to link two zinc finger modules together and expensive to design | Sensitive to DNA methylation Require pair of TALEN with two independent DNA binding sites | Require PAM site near the target DNA sequence to design gRNA Off-target effect observed Cas9 protein too large for AAV-based delivery | Only accounts for 4 out of 12 possible base-to-base conversions Too large for AAV-based delivery Difficult to edit DNA sequence that several A or C residues are nearby | High targeting efficiency but may depend on cell type Too large for AAV-based delivery Detection of undesired off-target effects and on-target mutation |
Fig. 2Graphics of gene editing technologies
Fig. 3CF animal models compared to human disease phenotypes
Fig. 4Cell models to study CF disease and therapies. For gene editing approaches, green “✓” indicates research data supporting the use of these approaches in the cell models for CF gene correction. Red “X” indicates no information available. For advantages/limitations section, green “✓” indicates possible and red “X” indicates not possible