International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2022)

CRISPR/Cas9-Mediated Allele-Specific Disruption of a Dominant <i>COL6A1</i> Pathogenic Variant Improves Collagen VI Network in Patient Fibroblasts

  • Arístides López-Márquez,
  • Matías Morín,
  • Sergio Fernández-Peñalver,
  • Carmen Badosa,
  • Alejandro Hernández-Delgado,
  • Daniel Natera-de Benito,
  • Carlos Ortez,
  • Andrés Nascimento,
  • Daniel Grinberg,
  • Susanna Balcells,
  • Mónica Roldán,
  • Miguel Ángel Moreno-Pelayo,
  • Cecilia Jiménez-Mallebrera

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084410
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 8
p. 4410

Abstract

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Collagen VI-related disorders are the second most common congenital muscular dystrophies for which no treatments are presently available. They are mostly caused by dominant-negative pathogenic variants in the genes encoding α chains of collagen VI, a heteromeric network forming collagen; for example, the c.877G>A; p.Gly293Arg COL6A1 variant, which alters the proper association of the tetramers to form microfibrils. We tested the potential of CRISPR/Cas9-based genome editing to silence or correct (using a donor template) a mutant allele in the dermal fibroblasts of four individuals bearing the c.877G>A pathogenic variant. Evaluation of gene-edited cells by next-generation sequencing revealed that correction of the mutant allele by homologous-directed repair occurred at a frequency lower than 1%. However, the presence of frameshift variants and others that provoked the silencing of the mutant allele were found in >40% of reads, with no effects on the wild-type allele. This was confirmed by droplet digital PCR with allele-specific probes, which revealed a reduction in the expression of the mutant allele. Finally, immunofluorescence analyses revealed a recovery in the collagen VI extracellular matrix. In summary, we demonstrate that CRISPR/Cas9 gene-edition can specifically reverse the pathogenic effects of a dominant negative variant in COL6A1.

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