4.7 Article

Quantitative evaluation of chromosomal rearrangements in gene-edited human stem cells by CAST-Seq

Journal

CELL STEM CELL
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 1136-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.02.002

Keywords

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Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research [IFB-01EO1303, MIRACUM-01ZZ1801B]
  2. German Research Foundation [SFB 1160, SFB 850]

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CAST-Seq is a sensitive assay that can detect and quantify chromosomal aberrations in human hematopoietic stem cells, including various types of aberrations such as homology-mediated translocations. It is particularly relevant for therapeutic genome editing to enable thorough risk assessment before clinical application.
Genome editing has shown great promise for clinical translation but also revealed the risk of genotoxicity caused by off-target effects of programmable nucleases. Here we describe chromosomal aberrations analysis by single targeted linker-mediated PCR sequencing (CAST-Seq), a preclinical assay to identify and quantify chromosomal aberrations derived from on-target and off-target activities of CRISPR-Cas nucleases or transcriptional activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), respectively, in human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Depending on the employed designer nuclease, CAST-Seq detected translocations in 0%-0.5% of gene-edited human CD34+ HSCs, and up to 20% of on-target loci harbored gross rearrangements. Moreover, CAST-Seq detected distinct types of chromosomal aberrations, such as homology-mediated translocations, that are mediated by homologous recombination and not off-target activity. CAST-Seq is a sensitive assay able to identify and quantify unintended chromosomal rearrangements in addition to the more typical mutations at off-target sites. CAST-Seq analyses may be particularly relevant for therapeutic genome editing to enable thorough risk assessment before clinical application of gene-edited products.

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