Elimination of Toxic Microsatellite Repeat Expansion RNA by RNA-Targeting Cas9

Authors
Batra R1, Nelles DA1, Pirie E1, Blue SM1, Marina RJ1, Wang H1, Chaim IA1, Thomas JD2, Zhang N1, Nguyen V1, Aigner S1, Markmiller S1, Xia G3, Corbett KD4, Swanson MS2, Yeo GW5.
12-20-2017 HSW 1057
12:00pm
PST
Categories
RNA Modification & Editing
Speaker
Vanille Greiner
Abstract

Microsatellite repeat expansions in DNA produce pathogenic RNA species that cause dominantly inherited diseases such as myotonic dystrophy type 1 and 2 (DM1/2), Huntington's disease, and C9orf72-linked amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (C9-ALS). Means to target these repetitive RNAs are required for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. Here, we describe the development of a programmable CRISPR system capable of specifically visualizing and eliminating these toxic RNAs. We observe specific targeting and efficient elimination of microsatellite repeat expansion RNAs both when exogenously expressed and in patient cells. Importantly, RNA-targeting Cas9 (RCas9) reverses hallmark features of disease including elimination of RNA foci among all conditions studied (DM1, DM2, C9-ALS, polyglutamine diseases), reduction of polyglutamine protein products, relocalization of repeat-bound proteins to resemble healthy controls, and efficient reversal of DM1-associated splicing abnormalities in patient myotubes. Finally, we report a truncated RCas9 system compatible with adeno-associated viral packaging. This effort highlights the potential of RCas9 for human therapeutics.