Potent and uniform fetal hemoglobin induction via base editing.
Thiyagaraj MayuranathanGregory A NewbyRuopeng FengYu YaoKalin D MayberryCicera R LazzarottoYichao LiRachel M LevineNikitha NimmagaddaErin DempseyGuolian KangShaina N PorterPhillip A DoerflerJingjing ZhangYoonjeong JangJingjing ChenHenry William BellMerlin CrossleySenthil Velan BhoopalanAkshay SharmaJohn F TisdaleShondra M Pruett-MillerYong ChengShengdar Q TsaiDavid R LiuMitchell J WeissJonathan S YenPublished in: Nature genetics (2023)
Inducing fetal hemoglobin (HbF) in red blood cells can alleviate β-thalassemia and sickle cell disease. We compared five strategies in CD34 + hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells, using either Cas9 nuclease or adenine base editors. The most potent modification was adenine base editor generation of γ-globin -175A>G. Homozygous -175A>G edited erythroid colonies expressed 81 ± 7% HbF versus 17 ± 11% in unedited controls, whereas HbF levels were lower and more variable for two Cas9 strategies targeting a BCL11A binding motif in the γ-globin promoter or a BCL11A erythroid enhancer. The -175A>G base edit also induced HbF more potently than a Cas9 approach in red blood cells generated after transplantation of CD34 + hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells into mice. Our data suggest a strategy for potent, uniform induction of HbF and provide insights into γ-globin gene regulation. More generally, we demonstrate that diverse indels generated by Cas9 can cause unexpected phenotypic variation that can be circumvented by base editing.