Multiplexed CRISPR/CAS9-mediated engineering of pre-clinical mouse models bearing native human B cell receptors.
Xuesong WangRashmi RaySven KratochvilEleonora MelziYing-Cing LinSophie GiguereLiling XuJohn WarnerDiane CheonAlessia LiguoriBettina GroschelNicole PhelpsYumiko AdachiRyan TingleLin WuShane CrottyKathrin H KirschUsha NairWilliam R SchiefFacundo D BatistaPublished in: The EMBO journal (2020)
B-cell receptor (BCR) knock-in (KI) mouse models play an important role in vaccine development and fundamental immunological studies. However, the time required to generate them poses a bottleneck. Here we report a one-step CRISPR/Cas9 KI methodology to combine the insertion of human germline immunoglobulin heavy and light chains at their endogenous loci in mice. We validate this technology with the rapid generation of three BCR KI lines expressing native human precursors, instead of computationally inferred germline sequences, to HIV broadly neutralizing antibodies. We demonstrate that B cells from these mice are fully functional: upon transfer to congenic, wild type mice at controlled frequencies, such B cells can be primed by eOD-GT8 60mer, a germline-targeting immunogen currently in clinical trials, recruited to germinal centers, secrete class-switched antibodies, undergo somatic hypermutation, and differentiate into memory B cells. KI mice expressing functional human BCRs promise to accelerate the development of vaccines for HIV and other infectious diseases.
Keyphrases
- wild type
- endothelial cells
- crispr cas
- clinical trial
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- mouse model
- antiretroviral therapy
- pluripotent stem cells
- genome editing
- hepatitis c virus
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- high fat diet induced
- infectious diseases
- hiv positive
- squamous cell carcinoma
- tyrosine kinase
- radiation therapy
- gene expression
- lymph node
- oxidative stress
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- dna damage
- case control
- genome wide association study
- genome wide association