Nature Communications (Apr 2023)

Direct correction of haemoglobin E β-thalassaemia using base editors

  • Mohsin Badat,
  • Ayesha Ejaz,
  • Peng Hua,
  • Siobhan Rice,
  • Weijiao Zhang,
  • Lance D. Hentges,
  • Christopher A. Fisher,
  • Nicholas Denny,
  • Ron Schwessinger,
  • Nirmani Yasara,
  • Noemi B. A. Roy,
  • Fadi Issa,
  • Andi Roy,
  • Paul Telfer,
  • Jim Hughes,
  • Sachith Mettananda,
  • Douglas R. Higgs,
  • James O. J. Davies

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-37604-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Haemoglobin E (HbE) β-thalassaemia causes approximately 50% of all severe thalassaemia worldwide; equating to around 30,000 births per year. HbE β-thalassaemia is due to a point mutation in codon 26 of the human HBB gene on one allele (GAG; glutamatic acid → AAG; lysine, E26K), and any mutation causing severe β-thalassaemia on the other. When inherited together in compound heterozygosity these mutations can cause a severe thalassaemic phenotype. However, if only one allele is mutated individuals are carriers for the respective mutation and have an asymptomatic phenotype (β-thalassaemia trait). Here we describe a base editing strategy which corrects the HbE mutation either to wildtype (WT) or a normal variant haemoglobin (E26G) known as Hb Aubenas and thereby recreates the asymptomatic trait phenotype. We have achieved editing efficiencies in excess of 90% in primary human CD34 + cells. We demonstrate editing of long-term repopulating haematopoietic stem cells (LT-HSCs) using serial xenotransplantation in NSG mice. We have profiled the off-target effects using a combination of circularization for in vitro reporting of cleavage effects by sequencing (CIRCLE-seq) and deep targeted capture and have developed machine-learning based methods to predict functional effects of candidate off-target mutations.