Title
Predictable CRISPR/Cas9-Mediated COL7A1 Reframing for Dystrophic Epidermolysis Bullosa
Authors
Thomas Kocher, Oliver Patrick March, Johannes Bischof, Bernadette Liemberger, Stefan Hainzl, Alfred Klausegger, Anna Hoog, Dirk Strunk, Johann Wolfgang Bauer, Ulrich Koller
Institution
University Hospital of the Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg
Country
Austria
Year
2020
Journal
Journal of Investigative Dermatology
Abstract
End-joining‒based gene editing is frequently used for efficient reframing and knockout of target genes. However, the associated random, unpredictable, and often heterogeneous repair outcomes limit its applicability for therapeutic approaches. This study revealed more precise and predictable outcomes simply on the basis of the sequence context at the CRISPR/Cas9 target site. The severe dystrophic form of the blistering skin disease epidermolysis bullosa (DEB) represents a suitable model platform to test these recent developments for the disruption and reframing of dominant and recessive alleles, respectively, both frequently seen in DEB. We delivered a CRISPR/Cas9 nuclease as ribonucleoprotein into primary wild-type and recessive DEB keratinocytes to introduce a precise predictable single adenine sense-strand insertion at the target site. We achieved type VII collagen knockout in more than 40% of ribonucleoprotein-treated primary wild-type keratinocytes and type VII collagen restoration in more than 70% of ribonucleoprotein-treated recessive DEB keratinocytes. Next-generation sequencing of the on-target site revealed the presence of the precise adenine insertion upstream of the pathogenic mutation in at least 17% of all analyzed COL7A1 alleles. This demonstrates that COL7A1 editing based on precise end-joining‒mediated DNA repair is an efficient strategy to revert the disease-associated nature of DEB regardless of the mutational inheritance.
Product use
HPEK culture
Tissue type
Epidermal
Tissue info
HPEK
Species
Human

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