Amelioration of Beta-hemoglobinopathies by efficient precise deletion of the +58 BCL11A enhancer using orthogonal Cas9-Cas9 chimeras
Kevin Luk | Wolfe Lab | F31 Award
Project Summary β-Thalassemia and sickle cell disease (SCD) are severe inherited anemias that result in defective β-globin expression. A common feature shared between both disorders is that the diseases can be mitigated by the production of fetal hemoglobin (HbF). Current treatments for both disorders are mainly supportive and focus on alleviating disease complications. However, management of these β-hemoglobinopathies is expensive, restrictive, lifelong, and associated with significant side effects. Currently, allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell therapy is the only curative treatment for β-hemoglobinopathies. However, finding human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched donors is highly challenging. Gene editing approaches that alter the expression of HbF should improve the health and quality of life of individuals with β-hemoglobinopathies. The goal of this project is to develop efficient, accurate, and safe CRISPR gene editing approaches as a universal treatment for β-hemoglobinopathies. Typically, a nuclease (SpyCas9) and guide RNA (gRNA) target a specific region (+58 enhancer of BCL11A) and creates a double-stranded break. Small insertions or deletions (InDels) are created when imprecise repair of the DNA break occurs, resulting in inactivation of the target gene or functional element. Current therapeutic editing approaches for β-hemoglobinopathies at the BCL11A locus focus on the mutagenesis of a single GATA1 recognition sequence within the +58 enhancer in CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), limiting the scope of their potential impact. This project will harness our recently developed Cas9-Cas9 fusion chimera, which is able to produce segmental deletions with defined junctions (precise deletions) at a higher efficiency than standard Cas9 nucleases. Furthermore, Cas9-Cas9 fusions are able to effectively target suboptimal PAM sequences, and thus these nucleases have a broader targeting range than standard SpyCas9. These properties make Cas9- Cas9 fusions ideal for the deletion of therapeutically relevant regulatory elements, such as the +58 enhancer of BCL11A. Our preliminary studies show that ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complexes of these Cas9-Cas9 fusions targeting this locus are functional in CD34+ HSPCs and result in robust induction of HbF. In Aim 1, I will define deletion products within the +58 enhancer that facilitate the maximum induction of HbF in erythroid model systems and optimize the Cas9-Cas9 fusions to efficiently and specifically produce these precise deletions with minimal collateral damage to the genome. In Aim 2, optimized Cas9-Cas9 fusion protein-sgRNA complexes will be delivered into CD34+ HSPCs and HbF induction levels will be quantified in erythroid progeny. Treated CD34+ cells will be engrafted into immunodeficient mice to measure engraftment potential and persistence of editing in long-term hematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs). The genome-editing tools generated from the proposed work will provide a path to improved autologous HSC therapies that will impact the lives of individuals affected by β-hemoglobinopathies.