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Efficient gene editing of human long-term hematopoietic stem cells validated by clonal tracking

Authors :
Giulia Unali
Ivan Merelli
Stefano Beretta
Aurelien Jacob
Luisa Albano
Pietro Genovese
Samuele Ferrari
Anna Kajaste-Rudnitski
Davide Cittaro
Valentina Vavassori
Federica Cugnata
Luigi Naldini
Chiara Brombin
Dejan Lazarevic
Ferrari, S
Jacob, A
Beretta, S
Unali, G
Albano, L
Vavassori, V
Cittaro, D
Lazarevic, D
Brombin, C
Cugnata, F
Kajaste-Rudnitski, A
Merelli, I
Genovese, P
Naldini, L
Ferrari, S.
Jacob, A.
Beretta, S.
Unali, G.
Albano, L.
Vavassori, V.
Cittaro, D.
Lazarevic, D.
Brombin, C.
Cugnata, F.
Kajaste-Rudnitski, A.
Merelli, I.
Genovese, P.
Naldini, L.
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.

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