scholarly journals A toxin-antidote CRISPR gene drive system for regional population modification

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackson Champer ◽  
Yoo Lim Lee ◽  
Emily Yang ◽  
Chen Liu ◽  
Andrew G. Clark ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTEngineered gene drives have been suggested as a mechanism for rapidly spreading genetic alterations through a population. One promising type of drive is the CRISPR homing drive, which has recently been demonstrated in several organisms. However, such drives face a major obstacle in the form of resistance against the drive that typically evolves rapidly. In addition, homing-type drives are generally self-sustaining, meaning that a drive would likely spread to all individuals of a species even when introduced at low frequency in a single location. Here, we develop a new form of CRISPR gene drive, the Toxin-Antidote Recessive Embryo (TARE) drive, which successfully limits resistance by targeting a recessive lethal gene while providing a recoded sequence to rescue only drive-carrying individuals. Our computational modeling shows that such a drive will have threshold-dependent dynamics, spreading only when introduced above a frequency threshold that depends on the fitness cost of the drive. We demonstrate such a drive in Drosophila with 88-95% transmission to the progeny of female drive heterozygotes. This drive was able to spread through a large cage population in just six generations following introduction at 24% frequency without any apparent evolution of resistance. Our results suggest that TARE drives constitute promising candidates for the development of effective, regionally confined population modification drives.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (39) ◽  
pp. 24377-24383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackson Champer ◽  
Emily Yang ◽  
Esther Lee ◽  
Jingxian Liu ◽  
Andrew G. Clark ◽  
...  

Engineered gene drives are being explored as a new strategy in the fight against vector-borne diseases due to their potential for rapidly spreading genetic modifications through a population. However, CRISPR-based homing gene drives proposed for this purpose have faced a major obstacle in the formation of resistance alleles that prevent Cas9 cleavage. Here, we present a homing drive in Drosophila melanogaster that reduces the prevalence of resistance alleles below detectable levels by targeting a haplolethal gene with two guide RNAs (gRNAs) while also providing a rescue allele. Resistance alleles that form by end-joining repair typically disrupt the haplolethal target gene and are thus removed from the population because individuals that carry them are nonviable. We demonstrate that our drive is highly efficient, with 91% of the progeny of drive heterozygotes inheriting the drive allele and with no functional resistance alleles observed in the remainder. In a large cage experiment, the drive allele successfully spread to all individuals within a few generations. These results show that a haplolethal homing drive can provide an effective tool for targeted genetic modification of entire populations.



2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 337-346 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anuradha Gupta ◽  
Anas Ahmad ◽  
Aqib Iqbal Dar ◽  
Rehan Khan

Cancer is an evolutionary disease with multiple genetic alterations, accumulated due to chromosomal instability and/or aneuploidy and it sometimes acquires drug-resistant phenotype also. Whole genome sequencing and mutational analysis helped in understanding the differences among persons for predisposition of a disease and its treatment non-responsiveness. Thus, molecular targeted therapies came into existence. Among them, the concept of synthetic lethality have enthralled great attention as it is a pragmatic approach towards exploiting cancer cell specific mutations to specifically kill cancer cells without affecting normal cells and thus enhancing anti-cancer drug therapeutic index. Thus, this approach helped in discovering new therapeutic molecules for development of precision medicine. Nanotechnology helped in delivering these molecules to the target site in an effective concentration thus reducing off target effects of drugs, dose and dosage frequency drugs. Researchers have tried to deliver siRNA targeting synthetic lethal partner for target cancer cell killing by incorporating it in nanoparticles and it has shown efficacy by preventing tumor progression. This review summarizes the brief introduction of synthetic lethality, and synthetic lethal gene interactions, with a major focus on its therapeutic anticancer potential with the application of nanotechnology for development of personalized medicine.



2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackson Champer ◽  
Riona Reeves ◽  
Suh Yeon Oh ◽  
Chen Liu ◽  
Jingxian Liu ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA functioning gene drive system could fundamentally change our strategies for the control of vector-borne diseases by facilitating rapid dissemination of transgenes that prevent pathogen transmission or reduce vector capacity. CRISPR/Cas9 gene drive promises such a mechanism, which works by converting cells that are heterozygous for the drive construct into homozygotes, thereby enabling super-Mendelian inheritance. Though CRISPR gene drive activity has already been demonstrated, a key obstacle for current systems is their propensity to generate resistance alleles. In this study, we developed two CRISPR gene drive constructs based on thenanosandvasapromoters that allowed us to illuminate the different mechanisms by which resistance alleles are formed in the model organismDrosophila melanogaster.We observed resistance allele formation at high rates both prior to fertilization in the germline and post-fertilization in the embryo due to maternally deposited Cas9. Assessment of drive activity in genetically diverse backgrounds further revealed substantial differences in conversion efficiency and resistance rates. Our results demonstrate that the evolution of resistance will likely impose a severe limitation to the effectiveness of current CRISPR gene drive approaches, especially when applied to diverse natural populations.



Genetics ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-82
Author(s):  
Takao K Watanabe ◽  
Osamu Yamaguchi ◽  
Terumi Mukai

ABSTRACT Five hundred and two third chromosomes were extracted from a large cage population of Drosophila melanogaster initiated two months after collection of the progenitors near Raleigh, North Carolina in 1970.—Salivary gland chromosomes of 489 chromosome lines were examined and 54 chromosomes were found to carry inversions. The inversions were classified into three polymorphic types [In(3L)P, In(3R)P, and In(3R)C] and two unique types. The polymorphic inversions were found in frequencies of 0.012, 0.088, and 0.010, respectively.—Viabilities of homozygotes and heterozygotes were examined. Chromosomes with lethals occurred with a frequency of 0.495: 0.537 in the group of inversion-carrying chromosomes and 0.490 in the group of inversion-free chromosomes. The average homozygote viability computed on the basis of an average heterozygote viability of 1.0000 was 0.3235 if lethal lines were included and 0.6290 if they were excluded. The detrimental load to lethal load ratio (D:L ratio) was 0.70 (=0.4636-0.6650). The average viability of lethal heterozygotes was significantly larger than that of lethal-free heterozygotes. It appears, however, that lethal genes in heterozygotes have deleterious effects on fitness as a whole.—The average degree of dominance for viability polygenes was estimated to be about 0.3-0.4 in lethal-free individuals and nearly zero in lethal heterozygotes. Overdominance or some form of balancing selection was suggested at some loci. The difference between the values obtained for average degree of dominance due to genetic backgrounds and superior vibaility of lethal heterozygotes (but not fitness as a whole) suggests that some epistasis or coadaptation occurs.—The results described above are similar to those obtained for the second chromosomes (Mukai and Yamaguchi 1974).



Genetics ◽  
1977 ◽  
Vol 86 (3) ◽  
pp. 657-664
Author(s):  
Won Ho Lee ◽  
Takao K Watanabe

ABSTRACT Lethal and sterility mutations were accumulated in a cage population which was initiated with lethal- and sterility-free second chromosomes of D. melanogaster. It took about 2,000 days for the frequencies of these genes to reach equilibrium levels, i.e., 18% lethal and 9% male-sterile chromosomes. Two other cage populations which were initiated with random chromosomes sampled from natural populations and kept for more than eleven years in the laboratory showed 19-20% lethal content. The elimination rates of lethals by homozygosis in these populations were smaller than the mutation rate. By using Nei's formulae, the deleterious effect of a lethal gene in heterozygous condition (h) was estimated to be 0.035. The effective population number in the cage populations was estimated to be 1,000-2,900, while the actual population number was 3,500-7,800.



2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
James J Bull ◽  
Christopher H Remien ◽  
Richard Gomulkiewicz ◽  
Stephen M Krone

ABSTRACTGene drives may be used in two ways to curtail vectored diseases. Both involve engineering the drive to spread in the vector population. One approach uses the drive to directly depress vector numbers, possibly to extinction. The other approach leaves intact the vector population but suppresses the disease agent during its interaction with the vector. This second application may use a drive engineered to carry a genetic cargo that blocks the disease agent. An advantage of the second application is that it is far less likely to select vector resistance to block the drive, but the disease agent may instead evolve resistance to the inhibitory cargo. However, some gene drives are expected to spread so fast and attain such high coverage in the vector population that, if the disease agent can evolve resistance only gradually, disease eradication may be feasible. Here we use simple models to show that spatial structure in the vector population can greatly facilitate persistence and evolution of resistance by the disease agent. We suggest simple approaches to avoid some types of spatial structure, but others may be intrinsic to the populations being challenged and difficult to overcome.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marius Walter ◽  
Rosalba Perrone ◽  
Eric Verdin

Gene drives are genetic systems designed to efficiently spread a modification through a population. They have been designed almost exclusively in eukaryotic species, and especially in insects. We recently developed a CRISPR-based gene drive system in herpesviruses that relies on similar mechanisms and could efficiently spread into a population of wildtype viruses. A common consequence of gene drives in insects is the appearance and selection of drive-resistant sequences that are no longer recognized by CRISPR-Cas9. Here, we analyze in cell culture experiments the evolution of resistance in a viral gene drive against human cytomegalovirus. We report that, after an initial invasion of the wildtype population, a drive-resistant population is positively selected over time and outcompetes gene drive viruses. However, we show that targeting evolutionary conserved sequences ensures that drive-resistant viruses acquire long-lasting mutations and are durably attenuated. As a consequence, and even though engineered viruses do not stably persist in the viral population, remaining viruses have a replication defect, leading to a long-term reduction of viral levels. This marks an important step toward developing effective gene drives in herpesviruses, especially for therapeutic applications. Importance The use of defective viruses that interfere with the replication of their infectious parent after co-infecting the same cells – a therapeutic strategy known as viral interference – has recently generated a lot of interest. The CRISPR-based system that we recently reported in herpesviruses represents a novel interfering strategy that causes the conversion of wildtype viruses into new recombinant viruses and drives the native viral population to extinction. In this report, we analyzed how targeted viruses evolved resistance against the technology. Through numerical simulations and cell culture experiments with human cytomegalovirus, we show that, after the initial propagation, a resistant viral population is positively selected and outcompetes engineered viruses over time. We show however that targeting evolutionary conserved sequences ensures that resistant viruses are mutated and attenuated, which leads to a long-term reduction of viral levels. This marks an important step toward the development of novel therapeutic strategies against herpesviruses.



Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 622-622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Rinaldi ◽  
Paola MV Rancoita ◽  
Govind Bhagat ◽  
Urban Novak ◽  
Subhadra Nandula ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and Aim. In the current WHO classification, marginal zone B-cell lymphomas (MZL) have been divided into three distinct subtypes (extranodal, EMZL; nodal, NMZL; splenic, SMZL) according to clinical, pathological and cytogenetic features, however the relationship between any of the different subtypes is still unclear. We thus performed a comprehensive analysis of genomic DNA copy number changes in a very large series of MZL cases with the aim of addressing this question. Materials and Methods. DNA extracted from frozen samples of MZL was analyzed with Affymetrix Human Mapping 250K SNP arrays. Results. Samples from 193 patients with MZL (23 NMZL, 63 EMZL, 84 SMZL and 23 not better specified MZL) from 15 Institutions were analyzed. Among EMZL, main primary sites were orbital adnexa in 28%, GI-tract in 16%, lung and salivary glands 5% each. Overall, MZL displayed more recurrent deletions than gains. Gains of 3q and 18 gains were common to all three MZL subtypes as were losses at 1p32.3-pter, 7p22.1-pter, 7q11.21–q11.23, 9q33.3-qter, 16p, 17p and 19. EMZL had significantly more gains at 3p14.2-pter, 6p and 7q31.3-qter and losses at 6q15, 6q23.3 and 14q11.2 than SMZL. Conversely, the latter had deletions of 7q31.32-qter and 14q23.3–q32.13 more frequently than EMZL. NMZL profiles showed the EMZL-specific 6q losses and the SMZL-related 7q losses at very low frequency while presented recurrent gains of chromosome 11, which was unique of NZML among the three subtypes. The 6q23.3 region contains the gene coding for TNFAIP3/A20, a negative regulator of the NFkB pathway. In SMZL a minimal deleted region was observed in 7q32.1. Regarding chromosome 3, gains targeted the whole chromosome in EMZL while, in SMZL and NMZL, the long arm was more commonly affected. Conclusions. EMZL, NMLZ and SMLZL share genetic alterations, which differ from other B-cell lymphomas. However subtype-specific genetic lesions are observed. In particular, gains of 6p and losses of 6q23.3 (TNFAIP3) are specific for EMZL, and 7q31-qter for SMZL.



Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 3922-3922
Author(s):  
Bjoern Chapuy ◽  
Andrew J Dunford ◽  
Chip Stewart ◽  
Atanas Kamburov ◽  
Jaegil Kim ◽  
...  

Abstract Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) is a genetically heterogeneous disease characterized by multiple low-frequency alterations including somatic mutations, copy number alterations (CNAs) and chromosomal rearrangements. We sought to identify previously unrecognized low-frequency genetic events, integrate recurrent alterations into comprehensive signatures and associate these signatures with clinical parameters. For these reasons, our multi-institutional international group assembled a cohort of 304 primary DLBCLs from newly diagnosed patients, 87% of whom were uniformly treated with state-of-the-art therapy (rituximab-containing CHOP regimen) and had long term followup. Tumors were subjected to whole exome sequencing with an extended bait set that included custom probes designed to capture recurrent chromosomal rearrangements. In this cohort, 47% of samples had available transcriptional profiling and assignment to associated disease subtypes. Analytical pipelines developed at the Broad Institute were used to detect mutations (MuTect), CNAs (Recapseq+Allelic Capseq) and chromosomal rearrangements (dRanger+Breakpointer) and assess clonality (Absolute). To analyze formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tumors without paired normals we developed a method which utilized 8334 unrelated normal samples to stringently filter recurrent germline events and artifacts. Significant mutational drivers were identified using the MutSig2CV algorithm and recurrent CNAs were assessed with GISTIC2.0. In addition, we utilized a recently developed algorithm, CLUMPS2, to prioritize somatic mutations which cluster in 3-dimensional protein structure. With this approach, we identified > 90 recurrently mutated genes, 34 focal amplifications and 41 focal deletions, 20 arm-level events and > 200 chromosomal rearrangements in the DLBCL series. Of note, 33% of the mutational drivers were also perturbed by chromosomal rearrangements or CNAs, underscoring the importance of a comprehensive genetic analysis. In the large DLBCL series, we identified several previously unrecognized but potentially targetable alterations including mutations in NOTCH2 (8%) and TET2 (5%). The majority of identified chromosomal rearrangements involved translocations of potent regulatory regions to intact gene coding sequences. The most frequently rearrangements involved Ig regulatory elements which were translocated to BCL2, MYC, BCL6 and several additional genes with known roles in germinal center B-cell biology. After identifying recurrent somatic mutations, CNAs and chromosomal rearrangements, we performed hierarchical clustering and identified subsets of DLBCLs with comprehensive signatures comprised of specific alterations. A large subset of tumors shared recurrent alterations previously associated with follicular lymphoma including mutations of chromatin modifiers such as CREBBP, MLL2, and EZH2 in association with alterations of TNFRSF14 and GNA13 and translocations of BCL2. This cluster was enriched in GCB-type DLBCLs and contained a subset with select genetic alterations associated with an unfavorable outcome. An additional cohort of tumors was characterized by alterations perturbing B-cell differentiation including recurrent BCL6 translocations or alterations of PRDM1. A subset of these DLBCLs had alterations of NOTCH2 and additional pathway components or mutations of MYD88 in association with TNFAIP3, CD70 and EBF1, a master regulator of B-cell differentiation. An additional group of DLBCLs exhibited frequent MYD88 mutations in association with alterations of CD79B, PIM1, TBL1XR1 and ETV6 and BCL2 copy gain; these tumors were highly enriched for ABC-type DLBCLs. This coordinate signature and additional alterations of p53 pathway components were associated with outcome. We explored bases for the identified genetic alterations in DLBCL by performing an in silico mutational signature analysis. The most frequent mutational signatures were those of spontaneous deamination (aging) and AID with rare cases of microsatellite instability. We also assessed the clonality of identified genetic features to define cancer cell fraction and establish the timing of specific genetic events. The comprehensive genetic signatures of clinically annotated DLBCLs provide new insights regarding approaches to targeted therapy. Disclosures Link: Kite Pharma: Research Funding; Genentech: Consultancy, Research Funding. Rodig:Perkin Elmer: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; BMS: Research Funding. Pfreundschuh:Boehringer Ingelheim, Celegene, Roche, Spectrum: Other: Advisory board; Roche: Honoraria; Amgen, Roche, Spectrum: Research Funding. Shipp:Gilead: Consultancy; Sanofi: Research Funding; BMS: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Merck: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Bayer: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding.



2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 20180895 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauri Mikonranta ◽  
Angus Buckling ◽  
Matti Jalasvuori ◽  
Ben Raymond

Phage therapy is attracting growing interest among clinicians as antibiotic resistance continues becoming harder to control. However, clinical trials and animal model studies on bacteriophage treatment are still scarce and results on the efficacy vary. Recent research suggests that using traditional antimicrobials in concert with phage could have desirable synergistic effects that hinder the evolution of resistance. Here, we present a novel insect gut model to study phage–antibiotic interaction in a system where antibiotic resistance initially exists in very low frequency and phage specifically targets the resistance bearing cells. We demonstrate that while phage therapy could not reduce the frequency of target bacteria in the population during positive selection by antibiotics, it alleviated the antibiotic induced blooming by lowering the overall load of resistant cells. The highly structured gut environment had pharmacokinetic effects on both phage and antibiotic dynamics compared with in vitro : antibiotics did not reduce the overall amount of bacteria, demonstrating a simple turnover of gut microbiota from non-resistant to resistant population with little cost. The results imply moderate potential for using phage as an aid to target antibiotic resistant gut infections, and question the usefulness of in vitro inferences.



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