In vivo HSC prime editing rescues Sickle Cell Disease in a mouse model.
Chang LiAphrodite GeorgakopoulouGregory A NewbyPeter J ChenKelcee A EveretteKiriaki PaschoudiEfthymia VlachakiSucheol GilAnna K AndersonTheodore KoobLishan HuangHongjie WangHans-Peter KiemDavid R LiuEvangelia YannakiAndré LieberPublished in: Blood (2023)
Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is a monogenic disease caused by a nucleotide mutation in the β-globin gene. Current gene therapy studies are mainly focused on lentivirus vector-mediated gene addition or CRISPR/Cas9-mediated fetal globin reactivation, leaving the root cause unfixed. We developed a vectorized prime editing system that can directly repair the SCD mutation in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) in vivo in a SCD mouse model (CD46/Townes mice). Our approach involved a single intravenous injection of a non-integrating, prime editor-expressing virus vector into mobilized CD46/Townes mice and low-dose drug selection in vivo. This procedure resulted in the correction of ~40% of bS alleles in HSCs. On average 43% of HbS was replaced by HbA thereby greatly mitigating the SCD phenotypes. Transplantation in secondary recipients demonstrated that long-term repopulating HSCs were edited. Highly efficient target site editing was achieved with minimal generation of insertions and deletions and no detectable off-target editing. Because of its simplicity and portability, our in vivo prime editing approach has the potential for application in resource-poor countries where SCD is prevalent.
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