Using their novel approach, the
scientists were able to disable a protein on the T-cell surface called
CXCR4, which can be exploited by HIV when the virus infects T cells and
causes AIDS. The group also successfully shut down PD-1, a protein that
has attracted intense interest in the burgeoning field of cancer
immunotherapy, as scientists have shown that using drugs to block PD-1
coaxes T cells to attack tumors.
The
CRISPR/Cas9 system has captured the imagination of both scientists and
the general public, because it makes it possible to easily and
inexpensively edit genetic information in virtually any organism. T
cells, which circulate in the blood, are an obvious candidate for
medical applications of the technology, as these cells not only stand at
the center of many disease processes, but could be easily gathered from
patients, edited with CRISPR/Cas9, then returned to the body to exert
therapeutic effects.
But in practice, editing T cell genomes
with CRISPR/Cas9 has proved surprisingly difficult, said Alexander
Marson, PhD, a UCSF Sandler Fellow, and senior and co-corresponding
author of the new study. “Genome editing in human T cells has been a
notable challenge for the field,” Marson said. “So we spent the past
year and a half trying to optimize editing in functional T cells. There
are a lot of potential therapeutic applications, and we want to make
sure we’re driving this as hard as we can.”
The new work was done under the auspices
of the Innovative Genomics Initiative (IGI), a joint UC Berkeley-UCSF
program co-directed by Berkeley’s Jennifer Doudna, PhD, and Jonathan
Weissman, PhD, professor of cellular and molecular pharmacology at UCSF
and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigator. Marson is an
affiliate member of the IGI.
Doudna, professor of chemistry and of
cell and molecular biology at Berkeley, and an HHMI investigator, said
that the research is a significant step forward in bringing the power of
CRISPR/Cas9 editing to human biology and medicine. “It’s been great to
be part of this exciting collaboration, and I look forward to seeing the
insights from this work used to help patients in the future,” said
Doudna, co-corresponding author of the new paper.
Cas9, an enzyme in the CRISPR system that
makes cuts in DNA and allows new genetic sequences to be inserted, has
generally been introduced into cells using viruses or circular bits of
DNA called plasmids. Then, in a separate step, a genetic construct known
as single-guide RNA, which steers Cas9 to the specific spots in DNA
where cuts are desired, is also placed into the cells.
Until recently, however, editing human T
cells with CRISPR/Cas9 has been inefficient, with only a relatively
small percentage of cells being successfully modified. And while
scientists have had some success in switching off genes by inserting or
deleting random sequences, they have not yet been able to use
CRISPR/Cas9 to paste in (or “knock in”) specific new sequences to
correct mutations in T cells.
A team led by first authors Kathrin
Schumann, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in Marson’s laboratory, and Steven
Lin, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the Doudna lab, cracked these
problems by streamlining the delivery of Cas9 and single-guide RNA to
cells.
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