| Literature DB >> 35784464 |
Vasiliy V Reshetnikov1,2, Angelina V Chirinskaite3, Julia V Sopova3,4, Roman A Ivanov1, Elena I Leonova3,5.
Abstract
Rare genetic diseases reduce quality of life and can significantly shorten the lifespan. There are few effective treatment options for these diseases, and existing therapeutic strategies often represent only supportive or palliative care. Therefore, designing genetic-engineering technologies for the treatment of genetic diseases is urgently needed. Rapid advances in genetic editing technologies based on programmable nucleases and in the engineering of gene delivery systems have made it possible to conduct several dozen successful clinical trials; however, the risk of numerous side effects caused by off-target double-strand breaks limits the use of these technologies in the clinic. Development of adenine-to-inosine (A-to-I) and cytosine-to-uracil (C-to-U) RNA-editing systems based on dCas13 enables editing at the transcriptional level without double-strand breaks in DNA. In this review, we discuss recent progress in the application of these technologies in in vitro and in vivo experiments. The main strategies for improving RNA-editing tools by increasing their efficiency and specificity are described as well. These data allow us to outline the prospects of base-editing systems for clinical application.Entities:
Keywords: RNA editing; cure; dCas13; gene therapy; monogenic disease; repair; rescue
Year: 2022 PMID: 35784464 PMCID: PMC9245891 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2022.903812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1A brief overview of Cas13-based applications. For the detection of viral genomes in vitro, CRISPR–Cas13a is used as part of specific high-sensitivity enzymatic reporter UnLOCKing (SHERLOCK), where CRISPR–Cas13a cleaves a target RNA in the presence of a quenched RNA reporter that emits its fluorescence signal (Gootenberg et al., 2018). CRISPR–Cas13 is also a component of the CARVER system (Cas13-assisted restriction of viral expression and readout), which is aimed at specific degradation of viral RNA in vivo and has been successfully applied to various viral RNAs in cultured cells (Freije et al., 2019). Moreover, CRISPR–Cas13d within the PAC-MAN (prophylactic antiviral CRISPR in human cells) system inhibits SARS-CoV-2 replication by directly targeting and cleaving all viral positive-sense RNA (Abbott et al., 2020). The fusion of CRISPR–dCas13 with florescent proteins helped to use this system for RNA imaging and research on trafficking of RNAs (Abudayyeh et al., 2016); fusion with a splicing factor allows for regulation of alternative pre-mRNA splicing (Wang et al., 2019b), whereas fusion with a translational enhancer or repressor can help to manage the translation of a specific mRNA (Abudayyeh et al., 2016). Some investigators (Zhao et al., 2020) devised a photoactivatable RNA-m6A-editing system using CRISPR–dCas13 (PAMEC), which enables regulation of the methylation level of target RNA sites by means of light of different wavelengths. The fusion of dCas13 with deaminases has laid the foundation for the creation of site-directed RNA base–editing systems CURE, REPAIR, and RESCUE.
FIGURE 2Development of site-directed Cas13-based RNA-editing systems. Development of REPAIR (A-to-I) RNA editing system, RESCUE and CURE (C-to-U) editing systems. Explanation see in the text.
RNA editing for therapy of monogenic diseases in mouse models.
| Strain | Model | Delivery system | gRNA delivery system | Editing system | Target | Tissue | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Mecp2317G>A mice | Rett syndrome | AAV | λN-BoxB | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| Hippocampus |
|
| Mdx mice | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | AAV | MS2 GluR2 transcript | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| Muscle |
|
| spfash mice | Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency | AAV | GluR2 transcript | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| Liver |
|
| Idua-W392X mice | Hurler syndrome | AAV | cadRNAs | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| Liver |
|
|
| |||||||
| Neuro2A cells, Primary neurons from Mecp2R106Q mice | Rett syndrome | AAV | λN-BoxB | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| -- |
|
| HEK293T cells | Monogenetic type of Parkinson’s disease | Plasmid | -- | ADAR gRNAs |
| -- |
|
| Primary fibroblasts from Hurler syndrome patient | Hurler syndrome | Plasmid | -- | ADAR gRNAs |
| -- |
|
| HEK293FT cells | X-linked nephrogenic diabetes | AAV | dCas13 | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| -- |
|
| HEK293FT cells | Fanconi anemia | AAV | dCas13 | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| -- |
|
| HEK293T cells | Usher syndrome type 2 | Plasmid | dCas13 | hADAR2 (E488Q) |
| -- |
|