Effective splicing restoration of a deep-intronic ABCA4 variant in cone photoreceptor precursor cells by CRISPR/SpCas9 approaches
Pietro De Angeli, Peggy Reuter, Stefan Hauser, Lüdger Schöls, Katarína Štingl, Bernd Wissinger, Susanne Kohl
Abstract
Stargardt disease is an autosomal recessively inherited retinal disorder commonly caused by pathogenic variants in the ABCA4 gene encoding the ATP-binding cassette subfamily A member 4 (ABCA4) protein. Several deep-intronic variants in ABCA4 have been classified as disease causing. By strengthening a cryptic splice site, deep-intronic variant c.5197-557G>T induces the inclusion of a 188-bp intronic sequence in the mature mRNA, resulting in a premature termination codon. Here, we report the design and evaluation of three CRISPR-Cas9 approaches implementing Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 (single and dual guide RNA) or Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 nickase (dual guide RNA) for their potential to correct c.5197-557G>T-induced aberrant splicing in minigene splicing assays and patient-derived cone photoreceptor precursor cells. The different strategies were able to rescue correct splicing by up to 83% and increase the overall correctly spliced transcripts by 1.8-fold, demonstrating the successful CRISPR-Cas9-mediated rescue in patient-derived photoreceptor precursor cells of an ABCA4 splicing defect. The results provide initial evidence of possible permanent splicing correction for Stargardt disease, expanding the therapeutic toolbox to counteract deep-intronic pathogenic variants in ABCA4.