Promoterless gene targeting without nucleases rescues lethality of a Crigler‐Najjar syndrome mouse model
2017; Springer Nature; Volume: 9; Issue: 10 Linguagem: Inglês
10.15252/emmm.201707601
ISSN1757-4684
AutoresFabiola Porro, Giulia Bortolussi, Adi Barzel, Alessia De Caneva, Alessandra Iaconcig, Simone Vodret, Lorena Zentilin, Mark A. Kay, Andrés F. Muro,
Tópico(s)Adenosine and Purinergic Signaling
ResumoReport27 July 2017Open Access Transparent process Promoterless gene targeting without nucleases rescues lethality of a Crigler-Najjar syndrome mouse model Fabiola Porro Fabiola Porro International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Giulia Bortolussi Giulia Bortolussi International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Adi Barzel Adi Barzel Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Alessia De Caneva Alessia De Caneva International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Alessandra Iaconcig Alessandra Iaconcig International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Simone Vodret Simone Vodret International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Lorena Zentilin Lorena Zentilin International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Mark A Kay Mark A Kay Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Andrés F Muro Corresponding Author Andrés F Muro [email protected] orcid.org/0000-0002-9628-0494 International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Fabiola Porro Fabiola Porro International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Giulia Bortolussi Giulia Bortolussi International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Adi Barzel Adi Barzel Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Alessia De Caneva Alessia De Caneva International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Alessandra Iaconcig Alessandra Iaconcig International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Simone Vodret Simone Vodret International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Lorena Zentilin Lorena Zentilin International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Mark A Kay Mark A Kay Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA Search for more papers by this author Andrés F Muro Corresponding Author Andrés F Muro [email protected] orcid.org/0000-0002-9628-0494 International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy Search for more papers by this author Author Information Fabiola Porro1,‡, Giulia Bortolussi1,‡, Adi Barzel2,3, Alessia De Caneva1, Alessandra Iaconcig1, Simone Vodret1, Lorena Zentilin1, Mark A Kay2 and Andrés F Muro *,1 1International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy 2Departments of Pediatrics and Genetics, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA 3Present address: Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, The George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel ‡These authors contributed equally to this work as first authors *Corresponding author. Tel: +39 040 3757369; Fax: +39 040 226555; E-mail: [email protected] EMBO Mol Med (2017)9:1346-1355https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201707601 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. Peer ReviewDownload a summary of the editorial decision process including editorial decision letters, reviewer comments and author responses to feedback. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info Abstract Crigler-Najjar syndrome type I (CNSI) is a rare monogenic disease characterized by severe neonatal unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia with a lifelong risk of neurological damage and death. Liver transplantation is the only curative option, which has several limitations and risks. We applied an in vivo gene targeting approach based on the insertion, without the use of nucleases, of a promoterless therapeutic cDNA into the albumin locus of a mouse model reproducing all major features of CNSI. Neonatal transduction with the donor vector resulted in the complete rescue from neonatal lethality, with a therapeutic reduction in plasma bilirubin lasting for at least 12 months, the latest time point analyzed. Mutant mice, which expressed about 5–6% of WT Ugt1a1 levels, showed normal liver histology and motor-coordination abilities, suggesting no functional liver or brain abnormalities. These results proved that the promoterless gene therapy is applicable for CNSI, providing therapeutic levels of an intracellular ER membrane-bound enzyme responsible for a lethal liver metabolic disease. Synopsis Gene targeting into the albumin locus without using nucleases rescues lethality in a severe genetic liver disease in mice, thereby avoiding the loss of therapeutic DNA by hepatocyte duplication, a critical issue in AAV-mediated gene replacement therapy. The "GeneRide" approach applied to a severe Crigler-Najjar mouse model fully rescues neonatal lethality, biochemical and functional abnormalities. The therapy reduced plasma bilirubin to safe levels, resulting in normal motor-coordination abilities. The absence of nucleases and promoter-driven transgene reduces most safety concerns of AAV-mediated gene replacement therapy. Our results show that the "GeneRide" approach is also effective for cytoplasmic and ER membrane-bound proteins. This proof-of-principle demonstrates the applicability of the approach to other genetic diseases of the liver. Introduction The Crigler-Najjar syndrome type I (CNSI) is a rare monogenic pediatric disease (0.6–1 cases per 106 live births) caused by a deficiency in the liver-specific uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase 1A1 (UGT1A1), resulting in severe unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia since birth, with lifelong risk of permanent neurological damage, kernicterus, and death (Crigler & Najjar, 1952; Huang et al, 1970). Current clinical practice consists of intense phototherapy (PT) treatment (12–14 h/day), but it becomes less effective with age, leaving liver transplantation as the only therapeutic option, with all the limitations and risks of the approach (Adam et al, 2012; Fagiuoli et al, 2013). Gene replacement mediated by adeno-associated virus (AAV) is a promising approach (Kay, 2011; Mingozzi & High, 2011; Nathwani et al, 2011). However, loss of episomal DNA and therapeutic efficacy may result from hepatocyte duplication, which is very prominent in the neonatal/pediatric period (Cunningham et al, 2008; Wang et al, 2012; Bortolussi et al, 2014b). Gene editing with sequence-specific endonucleases (Urnov et al, 2010; Joung & Sander, 2013; Wang et al, 2016) results in the permanent correction of disease-causing mutations. However, these approaches face a number of significant adverse effects, such as immunogenicity of the endonucleases, off-target cleavage and mutagenesis, and induction of chromosomal aberrations, concerns which are enhanced by the long-term expression of the nucleases (Carroll, 2014). Moreover, off-target integration of the transgene and endonuclease vectors bearing potent gene promoters carries the potential of transactivating cancer-related genes (Fu et al, 2013; Chandler et al, 2015). The GeneRide strategy (Barzel et al, 2015), based on the targeted insertion of a promoterless therapeutic cDNA into the albumin locus without the use of nucleases, overcomes most of the safety concerns of gene therapy and holds several advantages: (i) site-specific integration with transgene regulation and transcription controlled by the robust liver-specific albumin promoter (Tilghman & Belayew, 1982; Pinkert et al, 1987); (ii) lack of a promoter in the therapeutic vector, thus reducing the probability of activating neighboring oncogenes by random integration (Donsante et al, 2007); and (iii) no risks of gene inactivation by nuclease-mediated off-target, transactivation, and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development by insertion of the nucleases coding vectors. In the present work, we have successfully applied the promoterless approach without nucleases to a relevant lethal mouse model of the CNSI. Results Targeting the albumin locus without nucleases results in precise integration of the eGFP cDNA We first tested the promoterless gene editing approach without nucleases (Barzel et al, 2015) in WT animals by transducing a donor construct bearing the eGFP cDNA (rAAV8-Alb-eGFP), which contained the eGFP cDNA preceded by the 2A-peptide and flanked by the albumin homology arms (Fig 1A). Spontaneous site-specific recombination results in a fused mRNA (albumin-P2A-eGFP) transcribed by the strong albumin promoter that, due to the peptide 2A, is translated into two separate proteins. Figure 1. Transduction of WT neonate mice with the AAV-Alb-eGFP donor vector Vector design and experimental scheme. Recombination of the AAV8 vectors (containing the eGFP or the WT human Ugt1a1 cDNAs, preceded by the 2A-peptide, and flanked by albumin gene homology arms) results in a fused "chimeric bicistronic" mRNA, which is translated into two separate proteins. Rectangles represent exons; thick black lines, introns and intergenic regions; thin gray lines, extragenic DNA sequences. Modified from Barzel et al (2015). Histological analysis of liver sections. P2, P4, and P10 WT mice were IP transduced with rAAV8-Alb-eGFP (0.7E12 and 1E12 vgp/mouse) and sacrificed at P30. P30 WT mice were i.v. transduced and sacrificed at P45. As controls, WT mice were transduced with an episomal AAV8 vector (Bortolussi et al, 2014b). Nuclei were counterstained with Hoechst. Each field corresponds to a single animal (n = 3 per time point/treatment). Scale bar, 400 μm. Quantification of the number of eGFP-positive hepatocytes. Two-way ANOVA: interaction, P = 0.0011; dose, P < 0.0001; time of injection, P < 0.0001; Bonferroni post hoc tests (0.7E12 versus 1.0E12): P2, t = 5.271, P < 0.001; P4, t = 8.755, P < 0.001; P10, t = 2.141, P = NS. P2 1.0E12 versus P4 1.0E12, t = 4.226, P < 0.01; n = 3 per group; #, not performed. Quantitative RT–PCR of liver total RNA samples from panel (B). Each dot represents a single animal. Two-way ANOVA: interaction, P = 0.0009; dose, P < 0.0001; time of injection, P = 0.0013; Bonferroni post hoc tests (0.7E12 versus 1.0E12): P2, t = 2.244, P = ns; P4, t = 8.273, P < 0.001; P10, t = 1.647, P = ns; n = 3 per group. Data information: Results are expressed as mean ± SD. Download figure Download PowerPoint At post-natal day 2 (P2), P4, P10, and P30 WT pups were transduced with rAAV8-Alb-eGFP (0.7E12 and 1.0E12 vgp/mouse) and sacrificed at P30 (I.P., P2, P4, and P10) and at P45 (i.v., P30) (Fig EV1A). Histological analysis of liver sections showed that the highest recombination rate was obtained in P4 pups transduced with the higher AAV dose, reaching about 0.14% of hepatocytes (Figs 1B and C, and EV1B and EV2A), with a marked decrease in those injected at P10 and P30. AAV-mediated episomal expression was used for comparative purposes (Fig 1B). Click here to expand this figure. Figure EV1. Transduction of WT mice with the rAAV8-Alb-eGFP donor vector. Experimental scheme and molecular analysis Experimental scheme. P2, P4, and P10 WT mice were IP transduced with rAAV8-Alb-eGFP at two doses (0.7E12 and 1.0E12 vgp/mouse) and sacrificed at P30. P30 WT mice were i.v. transduced and sacrificed at P45 with 1E12 vgp/mouse (Fig 1B–D). Histological analysis of liver sections from WT neonate mice treated with rAAV-Alb-eGFP. Nuclei were counterstained with Hoechst (blue signal). Each field corresponds to a single animal (n = 3 per time point/treatment). Scale bar, 200 μm. Scheme of the targeted cDNA indicating the position of the regions of homology, P2A, eGFP cDNA, the position of the primers used for the RT–PCR shown in the agarose gels (panel D) and for the amplification of the sequenced fragment (panel E). Semi-quantitative RT–PCR of liver total RNA samples from WT mice injected at P2 or P4 with AAV-Alb-eGFP, as shown in panel (B). Animals were sacrificed at 1 and 4 months post-injection (lanes 1–15, and 20, 21, and 23, respectively). The primers annealed to the eGFP cDNA and to the albumin exon 15. A 1,123-base intron is present between albumin exons 14 and 15. The endogenous albumin mRNA was used as control. Lanes 16 and 22, molecular weight markers. Molecular analysis of the chimeric mRNAs. Chromatogram obtained by sequencing the chimeric Albumin-2A-eGFP cDNA RT–PCR product. The RT–PCR products obtained with the primers indicated in panel (C) were cloned in pGEM-T vector and sequenced. The mouse albumin exons 12, 13, and 14 are indicated, as well as the peptide 2A and the human eGFP cDNA. Download figure Download PowerPoint Click here to expand this figure. Figure EV2. Transduction of WT neonate mice with the AAV-Alb-eGFP donor vector with different doses, injection age, modality, and analysis time points A. P2 and P4 WT pups were IP transduced with rAAV-Alb-eGFP at two doses: 0.7E12 and 1.0E12 vgp/mouse. The % of eGFP-positive cells at 1 and 4 months is indicated. Each single dot represents an animal. Three sections per animals were analyzed. Results are expressed as mean ± SD. The numbers above each group indicate the mean value. Two-way ANOVA: interaction, NS; treatment, P = 0.0023; time, P = 0.0218; Bonferroni post hoc tests: time: P4 1.0E12 1 month versus P4 1.0E12 4 months, t = 0.6343, P = ns. B, C. Comparison of multiple and single AAV-Alb-eGFP administration of WT P4 neonates at different doses by IP injection. N = 3 per time point/dose. Three sections per animals were analyzed. One-way ANOVA: F = 21.20, P = 0.0004; Bonferroni comparison tests: multiple vs. 1.0E12, 2.0E12, 4.0E12, t = 7.360, t = 6.293, t = 5.008, P < 0.001, P < 0.01, P < 0.01, respectively; 1.0E12 versus 2.0E12, t = 1.067, 1.0E12 versus 4.0E12, t = 2.352, 2.0E12 versus 4.0E12, t = 1.285, all P = ns. Results are expressed as mean ± SD. Scale bar, 400 μm. Download figure Download PowerPoint RT–PCR analysis, using primers specific for the recombinant hybrid mRNA, resulted in the expected product (Fig EV1C–E). Expression of the chimeric mRNA, determined by qRT–PCR, correlated with recombination efficiency (Fig 1D). At 4 months after neonatal transduction, the proportion of eGFP-positive hepatocytes was roughly the same to that observed at P30 in the P4-high-dose group (Fig EV2A), while it was significantly reduced in the other groups. Semi-quantitative RT–PCR analysis of 4-month-old treated mice showed higher levels of PCR product in the mice injected at P4, as compared with samples from mice injected at P2 (Fig EV1D). Interestingly, when 1.0E12 vgp/mouse, from the same AAV batch preparation, was injected as a single dose, or divided in three injections performed the same day (P4), separated by 5–6 h, the efficiency of multiple injections (m.i.) was much higher than the single one. Even the highest dose transduced in a single injection (4.0E12 vgp/mouse) resulted in less eGFP-positive cells than 1.0E12 given as m.i. (Fig EV2B and C). hUgt1a1 integration into the albumin locus of Ugt1−/− mice results in a reduction in plasma bilirubin to therapeutic levels Following the successful targeting of the eGFP reporter construct, we transduced a construct containing the human WT Ugt1a1 cDNA (rAAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1) to Ugt1−/− mutant mice. These mice have a targeted mutation in the Ugt1 gene, complete absence of glucuronidation activity, severe hyperbilirubinemia from birth, severe cerebellar abnormalities, and death by kernicterus before P16 [(Bortolussi et al, 2012, 2014a) and Fig EV3A–C]. On the contrary, PT treatment from birth up to P15 results in survival of all mutant mice (Bortolussi et al, 2014a; Fig EV3B). Click here to expand this figure. Figure EV3. The GeneRide approach in the Ugt1−/− mouse strain A. Scheme of the protein with the position of the targeted one-base deletion and the DNA and protein sequences of the WT and mutant alleles. B. Kaplan–Meier survival curve of WT and Ugt1−/− mutant mice. C. The red triangle indicates the mutant pup. Its orange discoloration caused by severe hyperbilirubinemia is evident 36 h after birth. Panels (B and C) are from Bortolussi et al (2014a). D, E. Transduction of Ugt1−/− mice in non-lethal conditions with the rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector. Experimental strategy (D). Neonate mutant mice received PT since birth till P15 and were then kept under normal light conditions, were injected at the indicated time points and sacrificed at P30. Plasma bilirubin levels were determined at P30 (E). Controls correspond to Ugt1−/− mice treated only with PT up to P15. Each single dot represents an animal, determined in duplicate (one-way ANOVA: F = 38.00, P < 0.0001; Bonferroni comparison tests: P4 0.7E12, P4 1.0E12, P10 1.0E12 vs. control, t = 6.139, t = 9.761, t = 4.408, P < 0.001, P < 0.001, P < 0.01, respectively). Results are expressed as mean ± SD. Download figure Download PowerPoint Therefore, to demonstrate the feasibility and efficacy of the protocol, we performed our first experiment in non-lethal conditions. Mice were injected with AAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1 at P2, P4, and P10, at two doses (0.7E12 and 1.0E12 vgp/mouse), using the multiple injections procedure. Mice were treated with 15 days of PT from birth and sacrificed at P30 (Fig EV3D). All transduced mice showed a significant reduction in plasma bilirubin levels (Fig EV3E), compared with controls (non-AAV transduced mutant mice, treated with PT up to P15), with values well below those causing neurological damage (Bortolussi et al, 2014a). Mice transduced at P4 with the highest AAV dose (1.0E12 vgp/mouse) showed the lowest plasma bilirubin levels, confirming the results obtained with the AAV8-Alb-eGFP vector (Fig 1B–D). The decrease in plasma bilirubin levels indicates that the hUgt1a1 enzyme, derived from a chimeric mRNA, was functional. Lethality of mutant mice is rescued by hUgt1a1 gene targeting into the albumin locus Finally, to determine the therapeutic potential of the approach, we tested the procedure in lethal conditions, by treating mutant mice with PT for only 8 days after birth. This shorter PT treatment results in death of almost all mutant mice before P20 [7% survival (Bortolussi et al, 2014a)] but, at the same time, presents a "safe" time-window in which homologous recombination and transgene expression may occur after viral transduction. We transduced mutant mice at P4 with AAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1 (1.0E12 vgp/mouse) and maintained the animals under PT up to P8 (Fig 2A). The treatment resulted in survival of all treated mutant mice while all untreated mutant mice died (Fig 2B). Monitoring of the animals showed no obvious abnormalities up to 12 months, the last time point examined. AAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1-treated mice showed low levels of plasma bilirubin, with an increase in bilirubin levels during the first months, while it increased rapidly and constantly till death in untreated animals (Fig 2C), as previously shown (Bortolussi et al, 2014a). In the following months, total bilirubin values remained stable in all AAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1-treated mice. Despite bilirubin concentration in plasma of treated mutant animals was higher than WT (about 0.5 mg/dl), their levels were far from the toxic threshold during the whole experimental period. Figure 2. Transduction of Ugt1−/− mice in lethal conditions with the rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector rescues lethality Experimental strategy. Ugt1−/− mutant mice were injected at P4 with rAAV8 pAlb-hUGT1A1 (1.0E12 vgp/mouse) and maintained under PT up to P8. Kaplan–Meier survival curve. All rAAV-treated mutant mice (n = 5) survived, while all mutant mice treated only with PT up to P8 died before P19 (n = 6). P ≤ 0.0001, Log-rank (Mantel–Cox) test. Plasma bilirubin was determined up to 12 months. Untreated mice received no PT, and all died before P15. The gray area in the graph indicates the range of TB levels resulting in brain damage and death. Untreated, n = 3–6; treated, n = 5. Rotarod test of WT animals (n = 13) and WT treated with rAAV-Alb-eGFP donor vector (P4, 1.0E12 vgp/mouse, n = 5), and Ugt1−/− mice (n = 5) as described in panel (A). Ugt1−/− mice temporarily treated with PT (from P8 to P20, n = 3) with cerebellar abnormalities were used as control (Bortolussi et al, 2014a) (Ugt1−/− P8-P20 PT). One-way ANOVA: P = 0.0007; Bonferroni post hoc tests: WT versus Ugt1−/− P8-P20 PT, t = 4.612, P < 0.001; WT pAlb-eGFP versus Ugt1−/− P8-P20 PT, t = 4.381, P < 0.01; Ugt1−/− pAlb-hUGT1a1 vs. Ugt1−/− P8-P20 PT, t = 4.386, P < 0.01; all others, ns. Data information: Results are expressed as mean ± SD. Download figure Download PowerPoint To rule out the presence of functional abnormalities, we performed a motor-coordination test in a rotarod. Treated mutant mice performed similarly to WT untreated and WT-AAV-Alb-eGFP-treated mice (Fig 2D). Mutant mice temporarily treated with PT from P8 to P20 with cerebellar abnormalities due to bilirubin neurotoxicity (Bortolussi et al, 2014a), used as positive control for the rotarod test, showed a significant reduction in their performance. We then performed the molecular analysis of AAV-Alb-eGFP-treated livers. RT–PCR of total liver RNA using primers specific for chimeric cDNA showed the presence of the expected band (Fig 3A), which was confirmed by restriction enzyme digestion, cloning, and sequencing (Fig EV4A–C). Northern blot analysis showed a specific band of the expected size, corresponding to the chimeric Alb-P2A-hUgt1a1 mRNA (Fig 3B). The levels of the chimeric Alb-hUgt1a1 mRNA in treated mice at P30 were about 2.5% of those present in WT animals (mUgt1a1, Figs 3C and EV4D and E), but decreased in 4- and 12-month-old mice to 1.3 and 0.5%, respectively, as determined by quantitative RT–PCR using primers specific for each mRNA species (Fig EV4F). Figure 3. Molecular and histological analysis of Ugt1−/− mice treated with the rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector RT–PCR of liver RNA samples from Fig EV3D and panel (E) (P4 1.0E12 vgp/mouse). Gapdh mRNA was used as housekeeping control. UNTR indicates mice treated only with PT. Northern blot of total liver RNA from WT, Ugt1−/− untreated (PT up to P15) or treated with rAAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1 (1E12 vgp/mouse at P4, PT up to P8, sacrificed at P30). Black arrow, Alb-hUgt1a1 mRNA; asterisk, endogenous mUgt1a1 mRNAs. Quantitative RT–PCR of liver total RNA from mutant mice treated with rAAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1 (1E12 vgp/mouse at P4, PT up to P8, sacrificed at P30). Mice were the same of panel (D). Alb-hUgt1a1 mRNA levels are relative to endogenous Ugt1a1 mRNA levels of WT mice. RNA samples were analyzed in duplicate. WB analysis of liver protein extracts (50 μg) from Ugt1−/− mice untreated (only PT up to P15, lanes 8–10) or treated with rAAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1 (lanes 5–7), at 1 month. As control, WT plus Ugt1−/− liver extracts (1.25, 2.5 μg, and 5 μg of WT, completed with Ugt1−/− extract up to 50 μg, corresponding to 2.5, 5.0, and 10.0%, respectively, lanes 1–3). Short and long exposures are shown (S. and L., respectively). Loading control, actin. Estimation of Ugt1a1 levels in treated mice (lanes 5–7) by comparison with the signal obtained in lanes 1–3 (mix of extracts from WT and untreated mutant livers), ratio Ugt1a1/actin (RU, mean ± SD), 5.3 ± 2.1. IF analysis of liver sections from WT and Ugt1−/− mice treated with rAAV8 pAlb-hUgt1a1 at P4 (1.0E12, vgp/mouse, sacrificed at M1 or M12), using a human-specific anti-Ugt1a1 antibody. Nuclei were counterstained with Hoechst. n = 3–4 per time point/treatment. Right panel: Quantification of sections at 1 and 12 months. Student's t-test, P = 0.1825, NS. Scale bars, 10×, 200 μm, 20×, 100 μm. Data information: Results are expressed as mean ± SD. Download figure Download PowerPoint Click here to expand this figure. Figure EV4. Molecular analysis of the GeneRide approach in the Ugt1−/− mouse strain A. Scheme of the chimeric cDNA indicating the regions of homology, P2A, hUgt1a1 cDNA and the position of the primers used for the PCR and the size of the PCR products. B. The RT–PCR products of liver total RNA samples from mutant mice shown in Fig 3A were digested with AlwNI and NcoI. The size of the fragments is indicated. C. Chromatogram obtained by sequencing the chimeric Albumin-2A-hUgt1a1 cDNA RT–PCR product. The RT–PCR product obtained with the primers indicated in Fig EV5A was cloned in pGEM-T vector and sequenced. The mouse albumin exons 12, 13, and 14 are indicated, as well as the peptide 2A and the human hUgt1a1 cDNA. The restriction sites AlwNI and NcoI, used to confirm the nature of the RT–PCR product, are indicated. D, E. Comparison of the efficiency of the PCR primers in the amplification of Alb-hUgt1a1 and mouse Ugt1a1 (mUgt1a1) cDNAs. A set of primers specific for the chimeric Alb-hUgt1a1 mRNA and another one specific for the mouse endogenous Ugt1a1 mRNA were tested in parallel using serial 1:10 dilutions of the same amount of the specific purified DNA templates. The curves are shown in panel (D), while data are shown in panel (E). These conditions and primers were then used to compare the levels of the chimeric Alb-hUgt1a1 mRNA in treated mice with the endogenous mUgt1a1 mRNA levels present in WT mice (Fig 3C). F. Determination of the levels of the chimeric Alb-hUGT1a1 mRNA in liver of 1-, 4-, and 12-month-old mice. Mice were treated at P4 with 1.0E12 vgp/mouse of rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector. At the indicated time points, mice were sacrificed and levels of the chimeric mRNA analyzed by qRT–PCR. The graph indicates relative levels normalized to albumin mRNA. One-way ANOVA: F = 2.724, P = 0.1334, NS. Download figure Download PowerPoint Western blot analysis showed the presence of a Ugt1a1-specific band only in AAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1-treated animals (Fig 3D). A rough estimation of Ugt1a1 levels in treated mice was done by comparing the specific signal obtained in protein extracts of treated mutant mice (50 μg) with that obtained by loading increasing amounts of WT liver extracts (1.25, 2.5, and 5 μg) mixed with extracts from mutant mice, to complete 50 μg of protein load. WB quantification showed that treated mutant mice had about 5–6% of WT protein levels (Fig 3D). We could not detect any specific signal in liver extracts from AAV-Alb-hUgtt1a1-treated 4- and 12-month-old mice, even after long exposure of the membranes (Appendix Fig S1A–C). The anti-Ugt1a1 antibody detected an unspecific band in untreated mutant extracts that co-migrated with the expected band present in WT and mutant-AAV-Alb-hUgt1a1-treated extracts, not allowing the detection of Ugt1a1 in extracts containing less than 2.5% of WT Ugt1a1 (Fig 3D). Histological analysis showed that liver architecture was normal (Fig EV5A). Livers of 12-month-old treated mice did not show any sign of fibrosis or fatty liver (Masson's trichrome and Oil red O staining, respectively, Fig EV5B and C). However, since we observed increased infiltrates in both untreated and treated Ugt1−/− animals (Fig EV5A), suggesting the presence of inflammation, we analyzed inflammation markers in both Ugt1−/− mice and WT mice treated with the Ugt1a1 and eGFP donor vectors, respectively. Despite the absence of fibrosis or other abnormalities, we observed a trend toward the upregulation of inflammatory markers in mice treated with eGFP and hUgt1a1 donor constructs (Appendix Figs S2 and S3A and B). Immunohistochemical analysis with a human-specific anti-Ugt1a1 Ab revealed the presence of hUgt1a1-positive hepatocytes, both at 1 and 12 months post-injection, although they were less frequent in the 12-month time point (Fig 3E; ~0.032% and 0.015% at 1 and 12 months, respectively), confirming the results obtained by WB. Click here to expand this figure. Figure EV5. Histological analysis of Ugt1−/− mice treated with the rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector A. Ugt1−/− mutant mice injected at P4 with 1.0E12 vgp/mouse of rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector were sacrificed at 12 months after viral transfer. Liver sections were stained with hematoxylin–eosin. Representative images are shown. Scale bars, 10×, 200 μm, 20×, 100 μm. B, C. Livers from Ugt1−/− mice treated with the rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector show no evidence of fibrosis or fatty liver. Ugt1−/− mice injected at P4 with 1.0E12 vgp/mouse of rAAV-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector were sacrificed at 12 months after viral transfer. Liver sections were stained with Masson's trichrome and Red Oil O staining to detect fibrosis and fatty liver, respectively (panels B and C, respectively). No signs of fibrosis or fatty liver were detected. Representative images are shown. Scale bars, 10×, 200 μm, 20×, 100 μm. Download figure Download PowerPoint Discussion We successfully applied the promoterless gene targeting without nucleases approach to a severe and clinically relevant lethal mouse model of the CNSI, a liver disease of the newborns. We fully rescued lethality, biochemical, and functional abnormalities by transducing mutant neonate mice with the rAAV8-Alb-hUgt1a1 donor vector. Importantly, our results represent a proof of principle that this therapeutic approach can be also effective for
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