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Tailoring the CRISPR system to transactivate coagulation gene promoters in normal and mutated contexts.

Authors :
Pignani, Silvia
Zappaterra, Federico
Barbon, Elena
Follenzi, Antonia
Bovolenta, Matteo
Bernardi, Francesco
Branchini, Alessio
Pinotti, Mirko
Source :
BBA - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms; Jun2019, Vol. 1862 Issue 6, p619-624, 6p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Engineered transcription factors (TF) have expanded our ability to modulate gene expression and hold great promise as bio-therapeutics. The first-generation TF, based on Zinc Fingers or Transcription-Activator-like Effectors (TALE), required complex and time-consuming assembly protocols, and were indeed replaced in recent years by the CRISPR activation (CRISPRa) technology. Here, with coagulation F7/F8 gene promoters as models, we exploited a CRISPRa system based on deactivated (d)Cas9, fused with a transcriptional activator (VPR), which is driven to its target by a single guide (sg)RNA. Reporter gene assays in hepatoma cells identified a sgRNA (sgRNA F7.5) triggering a ~35-fold increase in the activity of F7 promoter, either wild-type, or defective due to the c.-61T>G mutation. The effect was higher (~15-fold) than that of an engineered TALE-TF (TF4) targeting the same promoter region. Noticeably, when challenged on the endogenous F7 gene, the dCas9-VPR/sgRNA F7.5 combination was more efficient (~6.5-fold) in promoting factor VII (FVII) protein secretion/activity than TF4 (~3.8-fold). The approach was translated to the promoter of F8 , whose reduced expression causes hemophilia A. Reporter gene assays in hepatic and endothelial cells identified sgRNAs that, respectively, appreciably increased F8 promoter activity (sgRNA F8.1 , ~8-fold and 3-fold; sgRNA F8.2 , ~19-fold and 2-fold) with synergistic effects (~38-fold and 2.7-fold). Since modest increases in F7/F8 expression would ameliorate patients' phenotype, the CRISPRa-mediated transactivation extent might approach the low therapeutic threshold. Through this pioneer study we demonstrated that the CRISPRa system is easily tailorable to increase expression, or rescue disease-causing mutations, of different promoters, with potential intriguing implications for human disease models. • CRISPR activation (CRISPRa) is a versatile tool to transactivate target promoters. • CRISPRa increased F7 and F8 promoter activity in luciferase-based reporter assays. • CRISPRa promoted expression of endogenous functional factor VII from hepatic cells. • Tailored CRISPRa enhances expression, or rescue disease-causing, promoter mutations. • Transactivation efficiency of CRISPRa resulted to be greater than that of TALE-TF. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18749399
Volume :
1862
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
BBA - Gene Regulatory Mechanisms
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
136540828
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbagrm.2019.04.002