Abstract

Abstract Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) bearing monogenic mutations have great potential for modeling disease phenotypes, screening candidate drugs, and cell replacement therapy provided the underlying disease-causing mutation can be corrected. Here, we report a homologous recombination-based approach to precisely correct the sickle cell disease (SCD) mutation in patient-derived iPSCs with 2 mutated β-globin alleles (βs/βs). Using a gene-targeting plasmid containing a loxP-flanked drug-resistant gene cassette to assist selection of rare targeted clones and zinc finger nucleases engineered to specifically stimulate homologous recombination at the βs locus, we achieved precise conversion of 1 mutated βs to the wild-type βA in SCD iPSCs. However, the resulting co-integration of the selection gene cassette into the first intron suppressed the corrected allele transcription. After Cre recombinase-mediated excision of this loxP-flanked selection gene cassette, we obtained “secondary” gene-corrected βs/βA heterozygous iPSCs that express at 25% to 40% level of the wild-type transcript when differentiated into erythrocytes. These data demonstrate that single nucleotide substitution in the human genome is feasible using human iPSCs. This study also provides a new strategy for gene therapy of monogenic diseases using patient-specific iPSCs, even if the underlying disease-causing mutation is not expressed in iPSCs.

Keywords

Induced pluripotent stem cellBiologyGeneticsHomologous recombinationPoint mutationGene cassetteGeneZinc finger nucleaseMutationLocus (genetics)Gene targetingGenome editingCRISPRPlasmidEmbryonic stem cell

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Publication Info

Year
2011
Type
article
Volume
118
Issue
17
Pages
4599-4608
Citations
296
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Jizhong Zou, Prashant Mali, Xiaosong Huang et al. (2011). Site-specific gene correction of a point mutation in human iPS cells derived from an adult patient with sickle cell disease. Blood , 118 (17) , 4599-4608. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2011-02-335554

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DOI
10.1182/blood-2011-02-335554