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Efficient gene editing of human long-term hematopoietic stem cells validated by clonal tracking
- Source :
- Nature Biotechnology, Nature biotechnology
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Targeted gene editing in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) is a promising treatment for several diseases. However, the limited efficiency of homology-directed repair (HDR) in HSCs and the unknown impact of the procedure on clonal composition and dynamics of transplantation have hampered clinical translation. Here, we apply a barcoding strategy to clonal tracking of edited cells (BAR-Seq) and show that editing activates p53, which substantially shrinks the HSC clonal repertoire in hematochimeric mice, although engrafted edited clones preserve multilineage and self-renewing capacity. Transient p53 inhibition restored polyclonal graft composition. We increased HDR efficiency by forcing cell-cycle progression and upregulating components of the HDR machinery through transient expression of the adenovirus 5 E4orf6/7 protein, which recruits the cell-cycle controller E2F on its target genes. Combined E4orf6/7 expression and p53 inhibition resulted in HDR editing efficiencies of up to 50% in the long-term human graft, without perturbing repopulation and self-renewal of edited HSCs. This enhanced protocol should broaden applicability of HSC gene editing and pave its way to clinical translation. Transient p53 inhibition and induced cell-cycle progression increase clonal engraftment and homology-directed repair in hematopoietic stem cells.
- Subjects :
- G2 Phase
Transcription, Genetic
Genetic enhancement
Transplantation, Heterologous
Biomedical Engineering
Bioengineering
Biology
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Stem-cell biotechnology
Article
S Phase
03 medical and health sciences
Mice
Viral Proteins
0302 clinical medicine
Gene therapy
Genome editing
Animals
Humans
Cell Lineage
Haematopoietic stem cell
E2F
030304 developmental biology
Gene Editing
0303 health sciences
Base Sequence
Targeted Gene Repair
HEK 293 cells
Recombinational DNA Repair
Reproducibility of Results
Dependovirus
Hematopoietic Stem Cells
Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
Cell biology
Clone Cells
Up-Regulation
Transplantation
Haematopoiesis
Targeted gene repair
HEK293 Cells
Cell Tracking
Molecular Medicine
Stem cell
Tumor Suppressor Protein p53
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Biotechnology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10870156
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Nature Biotechnology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2c3d3a85642f7b35497dd1c7bc511ead
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-020-0551-y