Allele-specific chromosome removal after Cas9 cleavage in human embryos Journal Article


Authors: Zuccaro, M. V.; Xu, J.; Mitchell, C.; Marin, D.; Zimmerman, R.; Rana, B.; Weinstein, E.; King, R. T.; Palmerola, K. L.; Smith, M. E.; Tsang, S. H.; Goland, R.; Jasin, M.; Lobo, R.; Treff, N.; Egli, D.
Article Title: Allele-specific chromosome removal after Cas9 cleavage in human embryos
Abstract: Correction of disease-causing mutations in human embryos holds the potential to reduce the burden of inherited genetic disorders and improve fertility treatments for couples with disease-causing mutations in lieu of embryo selection. Here, we evaluate repair outcomes of a Cas9-induced double-strand break (DSB) introduced on the paternal chromosome at the EYS locus, which carries a frameshift mutation causing blindness. We show that the most common repair outcome is microhomology-mediated end joining, which occurs during the first cell cycle in the zygote, leading to embryos with non-mosaic restoration of the reading frame. Notably, about half of the breaks remain unrepaired, resulting in an undetectable paternal allele and, after mitosis, loss of one or both chromosomal arms. Correspondingly, Cas9 off-target cleavage results in chromosomal losses and hemizygous indels because of cleavage of both alleles. These results demonstrate the ability to manipulate chromosome content and reveal significant challenges for mutation correction in human embryos. © 2020 Elsevier Inc. CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing in early human embryos leads to frequent loss of the targeted chromosome, indicating that human germline gene editing would pose a substantial risk for aneuploidy and other adverse genetic consequences © 2020 Elsevier Inc.
Keywords: mitosis; homologous recombination; embryonic stem cells; chromosome loss; interhomolog recombination; double strand break repair; cas9; germ-line gene editing; human embryo; microhomology mediated end joining
Journal Title: Cell
Volume: 183
Issue: 6
ISSN: 0092-8674
Publisher: Cell Press  
Date Published: 2020-12-10
Start Page: 1650
End Page: 1664.e15
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.10.025
PUBMED: 33125898
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 4 January 2021 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. Maria Jasin
    246 Jasin