212 research outputs found

    Attenuation of Zinc Finger Nuclease Toxicity by Small-Molecule Regulation of Protein Levels

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    Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) have been used successfully to create genome-specific double-strand breaks and thereby stimulate gene targeting by several thousand fold. ZFNs are chimeric proteins composed of a specific DNA-binding domain linked to a non-specific DNA-cleavage domain. By changing key residues in the recognition helix of the specific DNA-binding domain, one can alter the ZFN binding specificity and thereby change the sequence to which a ZFN pair is being targeted. For these and other reasons, ZFNs are being pursued as reagents for genome modification, including use in gene therapy. In order for ZFNs to reach their full potential, it is important to attenuate the cytotoxic effects currently associated with many ZFNs. Here, we evaluate two potential strategies for reducing toxicity by regulating protein levels. Both strategies involve creating ZFNs with shortened half-lives and then regulating protein level with small molecules. First, we destabilize ZFNs by linking a ubiquitin moiety to the N-terminus and regulate ZFN levels using a proteasome inhibitor. Second, we destabilize ZFNs by linking a modified destabilizing FKBP12 domain to the N-terminus and regulate ZFN levels by using a small molecule that blocks the destabilization effect of the N-terminal domain. We show that by regulating protein levels, we can maintain high rates of ZFN-mediated gene targeting while reducing ZFN toxicity

    Timed inhibition of CDC7 increases CRISPR-Cas9 mediated templated repair.

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    Repair of double strand DNA breaks (DSBs) can result in gene disruption or gene modification via homology directed repair (HDR) from donor DNA. Altering cellular responses to DSBs may rebalance editing outcomes towards HDR and away from other repair outcomes. Here, we utilize a pooled CRISPR screen to define host cell involvement in HDR between a Cas9 DSB and a plasmid double stranded donor DNA (dsDonor). We find that the Fanconi Anemia (FA) pathway is required for dsDonor HDR and that other genes act to repress HDR. Small molecule inhibition of one of these repressors, CDC7, by XL413 and other inhibitors increases the efficiency of HDR by up to 3.5 fold in many contexts, including primary T cells. XL413 stimulates HDR during a reversible slowing of S-phase that is unexplored for Cas9-induced HDR. We anticipate that XL413 and other such rationally developed inhibitors will be useful tools for gene modification

    CAS9 transcriptional activators for target specificity screening and paired nickases for cooperative genome engineering

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    Prokaryotic type II CRISPR-Cas systems can be adapted to enable targeted genome modifications across a range of eukaryotes.1–7. Here we engineer this system to enable RNA-guided genome regulation in human cells by tethering transcriptional activation domains either directly to a nuclease-null Cas9 protein or to an aptamer-modified single guide RNA (sgRNA). Using this functionality we developed a novel transcriptional activation–based assay to determine the landscape of off-target binding of sgRNA:Cas9 complexes and compared it with the off-target activity of transcription activator–like (TAL) effector proteins8, 9. Our results reveal that specificity profiles are sgRNA dependent, and that sgRNA:Cas9 complexes and 18-mer TAL effector proteins can potentially tolerate 1–3 and 1–2 target mismatches, respectively. By engineering a requirement for cooperativity through offset nicking for genome editing or through multiple synergistic sgRNAs for robust transcriptional activation, we suggest methods to mitigate off-target phenomena. Our results expand the versatility of the sgRNA:Cas9 tool and highlight the critical need to engineer improved specificity

    Investigating adverse genomic and regulatory changes caused by replacement of the full-length CFTR cDNA using Cas9 and AAV

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    A “universal strategy” replacing the full-length CFTR cDNA may treat >99% of people with cystic fibrosis (pwCF), regardless of their specific mutations. Cas9-based gene editing was used to insert the CFTR cDNA and a truncated CD19 (tCD19) enrichment tag at the CFTR locus in airway basal stem cells. This strategy restores CFTR function to non-CF levels. Here, we investigate the safety of this approach by assessing genomic and regulatory changes after CFTR cDNA insertion. Safety was first assessed by quantifying genetic rearrangements using CAST-seq. After validating restored CFTR function in edited and enriched airway cells, the CFTR locus open chromatin profile was characterized using ATAC-seq. The regenerative potential and differential gene expression in edited cells was assessed using scRNA-seq. CAST-seq revealed a translocation in ∼0.01% of alleles primarily occurring at a nononcogenic off-target site and large indels in 1% of alleles. The open chromatin profile of differentiated airway epithelial cells showed no appreciable changes, except in the region corresponding to the CFTR cDNA and tCD19 cassette, indicating no detectable changes in gene regulation. Edited stem cells produced the same types of airway cells as controls with minimal alternations in gene expression. Overall, the universal strategy showed minor undesirable genomic changes

    A hierarchical model for the cash transfer system design problem

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    This paper presents a hierarchical model that incorporates strategic, tactical, and operational decisions of cash transfer management system of a bank. The aim of the model is to decide on the location of cash management centers, the number and routes of vehicles, and the cash inventory management policies to minimize the cost of owning and operating a cash transfer system while maintaining a pre-defined service level. Owing to the difficulty of finding optimal decisions in such integrated models, an iterative solution approach is proposed in which strategic, tactical, and operational problems are solved separately via a feedback mechanism. Numerical results show that such an approach is quite effective in reaching at greatly improved solutions with just a few iterations, making it a very promising approach for similar models

    Structure-based redesign of the dimerization interface reduces the toxicity of zinc-finger nucleases

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    Artificial endonucleases consisting of a Fokl cleavage domain tethered to engineered zinc-finger DNA-binding proteins have proven useful for stimulating homologous recombination in a variety of cell types. Because the catalytic domain of zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) must dimerize to become active, two subunits are typically assembled as heterodimers at the cleavage site. The use of ZFNs is often associated with significant cytotoxicity, presumably due to cleavage at off- target sites. Here we describe a structure- based approach to reducing off- target cleavage. Using in silico protein modeling and energy calculations, we increased the specificity of target site cleavage by preventing homodimerization and lowering the dimerization energy. Cell-based recombination assays confirmed that the modified ZFNs were as active as the original ZFNs but elicit significantly less genotoxicity. The improved safety profile may facilitate therapeutic application of the ZFN technology

    Proviral HIV-genome-wide and pol-gene specific Zinc Finger Nucleases: Usability for targeted HIV gene therapy

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Infection with HIV, which culminates in the establishment of a latent proviral reservoir, presents formidable challenges for ultimate cure. Building on the hypothesis that <it>ex-vivo </it>or even <it>in-vivo </it>abolition <it>or </it>disruption of HIV-gene/genome-action by target mutagenesis or excision can irreversibly abrogate HIV's innate fitness to replicate and survive, we previously identified the isoschizomeric bacteria restriction enzymes (REases) AcsI and ApoI as potent cleavers of the HIV-pol gene (11 and 9 times in HIV-1 and 2, respectively). However, both enzymes, along with others found to cleave across the entire HIV-1 genome, slice (SX) at palindromic sequences that are prevalent within the human genome and thereby pose the risk of host genome toxicity. A long-term goal in the field of R-M enzymatic therapeutics has thus been to generate synthetic restriction endonucleases with longer recognition sites limited in specificity to HIV. We aimed (i) to assemble and construct zinc finger <it>arrays </it>and <it>nucleases </it>(ZFN) with either proviral-HIV-pol gene or proviral-HIV-1 whole-genome specificity respectively, and (ii) to advance a model for pre-clinically testing lentiviral vectors (LV) that deliver and transduce either ZFN genotype.</p> <p>Methods and Results</p> <p><it>First, </it>we computationally generated the consensus sequences of (a) 114 dsDNA-binding zinc finger (Zif) <it>arrays </it>(ZFAs or Zif<sub>HIV-pol</sub>) and (b) two zinc-finger <it>nucleases </it>(ZFNs) which, unlike the AcsI and ApoI homeodomains, possess specificity to >18 base-pair sequences uniquely present within the HIV-pol gene (Zif<sub>HIV-pol</sub>F<sub>N</sub>). Another 15 ZFNs targeting >18 bp sequences within the complete HIV-1 proviral genome were constructed (Zif<sub>HIV-1</sub>F<sub>N</sub>). <it>Second, </it>a model for constructing lentiviral vectors (LVs) that deliver and transduce a diploid copy of either Zif<sub>HIV-pol</sub>F<sub>N </sub>or Zif<sub>HIV-1</sub>F<sub>N </sub>chimeric genes (termed <b>LV- 2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-pol</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N </b></sub>and <b>LV- 2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-1</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N, </b></sub>respectively) is proposed. <it>Third, </it>two preclinical models for controlled testing of the safety and efficacy of either of these LVs are described using active HIV-infected TZM-bl reporter cells (HeLa-derived JC53-BL cells) and latent HIV-infected cell lines.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p><b>LV-2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-pol</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N </b></sub>and <b>LV- 2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-1</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N </b></sub>may offer the <it>ex-vivo </it>or even <it>in-vivo </it>experimental opportunity to halt HIV replication functionally by directly abrogating HIV-pol-gene-action <it>or </it>disrupting/excising over 80% of the proviral HIV DNA from latently infected cells.</p
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