Combinatorial base editing couples disease correction with lineage amplification in hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells
Jia, K.; Soupene, E.; Sinha, R.; Lesch, B. J.; Pendergast, M. A.; Choi, R.; Zhang, X.; Foppiani, E. M.; Kostamo, Z.; Chu, S. N.; Sharma, D.; Yu, X.; Cordero, M.; Walters, M. C.; MacKenzie, T. C.; Sheehan, V. A.; Cromer, M. K.
Show abstract
First-generation genome editing therapies have largely focused on correcting or compensating for pathogenic variants. However, as these approaches enter the clinic, emerging biological constraints limit maximal therapeutic impact. Because globin genes are activated late during erythroid differentiation, genome-corrected hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) gain little selective advantage in the bone marrow. Here, we establish a strategy that links therapeutic genome edits to an erythroid fitness-enhancing allele to amplify the output of clinically relevant cells. We develop a multiplex base editing strategy that couples fetal hemoglobin (HbF) reactivation with erythroid lineage expansion. Introduction of a naturally occurring erythropoietin receptor truncation (tEPOR) associated with benign erythrocytosis increased erythroid cell production without impairing viability or differentiation. Combinatorial editing of tEPOR together with the BCL11A erythroid enhancer and HBG1/2 promoters in healthy donor, sickle cell disease, and {beta}-thalassemia HSPCs synergistically increased erythroid proliferation and HbF expression beyond single base-edited or Casgevy-treated controls. Multiplex base-edited HSPCs retained long-term lineage repopulation and engraftment capacity in vivo, establishing a modular strategy that pairs disease correction with lineage amplification to improve therapeutic potency.
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