A non-viral CRISPR-mediated genome editing delivery platform as a potential therapy for neurogenetic diseases
Project Number5UG3TR004713-02
Contact PI/Project LeaderJIANG, YONG-HUI Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationYALE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Genome editing holds great promise for the treatment of many genetic diseases; however its application in the
clinic has been slow due to the lack of the safe delivery tools and significant cost and time investment required
to custom-develop individual therapies. In our SCGE program phase 1 study, we developed a chemically
modified ribonucleoprotein (cRNP)-based gene delivery system that specifically targets neuronal cells
throughout the brain after intrathecal (IT) administration. The overarching goal of this application is to apply this
novel gene editing technology towards the treatment of two severe neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD):
Angelman syndrome (AS) and H1-4 syndrome (HIST1H1E syndrome). AS is a devastating neurodevelopmental
disease caused by the deficiency of the maternal and brain specific imprinting UBE3A gene in human
chromosome 15q11-q13 region. The structure of UBE3A is intact in the paternal chromosome in all AS cases
but transcriptionally repressed by a non-coding and antisense RNA of UBE3A (UBE3A-ATS) mediated
mechanism. It has been shown convincingly that reduction of UBE3A-ATS by antisense oligo (ASO),
topoisomerase inhibitors, and virus delivered Cas9 gene editing can de-repress the expression of UBE3A and
correct the abnormal neurological phenotypes in AS mouse models. H1-4 syndrome is caused by a gain of
function mechanism due to a mutated protein with aberrant C-terminal frameshift tail (CFT). H1-4 syndrome has
similar but milder clinical features than AS. There is no effective intervention for H1-4 syndrome. Thus, a long-
term molecular therapy for AS and H1-4, as well as other NDDs is urgently needed. In our preclinical study using
a well validated AS mouse model, we demonstrated that a single IT delivery of Ube3a antisense-targeting
RNP/Cas9efficiently de-represses the expression of Ube3a from the paternal chromosome, leading to correction
of neurobehavioral phenotypes. Similarly, the knockdown of H1-4 CFT rescue the abnormal phenotypes in H1-
4 humanized mice. We propose our cRNP-based platform for the treatment of AS and H1-4 syndrome utilizing
the same genome editor (CRISPR), delivery system (cRNPs), route (IT), target cell type (neurons), therapeutic
mechanism (genetic inactivation) and overall trial design. We have assembled an outstanding team from Yale
and Rush University with strong and complementary expertise in the areas of preclinical, IND enabling studies,
and clinical trials. The success of this study will lead to the first ever gene editing based therapy for AS and H1-
4. More importantly, it will support a paradigm shift for genome editing; rapidly expanding the number of
neurogenetic diseases treated by in vivo gene editing and accelerating the transition of genome editing
technology into clinical applications.
Public Health Relevance Statement
We propose a new ribonucleoprotein (RNP)-gRNA CRISPR genome-editing strategy that will significantly
increase efficiency of genome-editing clinical trials for neurogenetic diseases. We will specifically target two
neurogenetic diseases with our RNP-based platform: Angelman Syndrome (AS) and H1-4 syndrome. Based on
strong proof-of-concept and IND-enabling data and our extensive experience with clinical treatment and trials
relating to these diseases, we propose a Phase 1/2a clinical trial to assess safety and tolerability in adults and
children.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
17 year oldAccelerationAdoptedAdultAngelman SyndromeAnimalsAnti-sense RNAAntisense OligonucleotidesAreaBiodistributionBrainC-terminalCRISPR/Cas technologyCellsChemicalsChildChromosomesClinicClinicalClinical TreatmentClinical TrialsClinical Trials DesignClustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic RepeatsCommunitiesComplexContractsCustomDataDevelopmentDiseaseDoseDrug KineticsEnrollmentEventFamilyFoundationsFundingFutureGenesGeneticGenetic DiseasesGenomicsGoalsGuide RNAHumanHuman ChromosomesImpairmentIndividualInfrastructureIntrathecal InjectionsInvestmentsManualsMediatingModelingModificationMolecularMonkeysMusMutateNeurodevelopmental DisorderNeurologicNeuronsOrganoidsOutcome MeasurePatient RecruitmentsPatientsPenetrationPerinatal mortality demographicsPharmacology StudyPharmacology and ToxicologyPhasePhase I Clinical TrialsPhenotypeProductionProteinsProtocols documentationRahman SyndromeRegulatory AffairsResearchRibonucleoproteinsRodentRouteSafetySignal TransductionStructureSurfaceSyndromeSystemTailTechnologyTherapeuticTimeTopoisomerase InhibitorsToxicologyUBE3A geneUnited States National Institutes of HealthUniversitiesUntranslated RNAVirusWorkadverse event monitoringbase editingbehavioral studycell typeclinical applicationcostderepressiondesigneffective interventionexperiencefirst-in-humangain of functiongene delivery systemgene editing technologygene repressiongenome editinggenome editorhumanized mouseimmunogenicityimprintimprovedin vivoknock-downmouse modelneurobehavioralneurogeneticsnovelnovel strategiespatient derived induced pluripotent stem cellspatient retentionpediatric patientsphase 1 studypre-Investigational New Drug meetingpre-clinicalpreclinical studyprimary outcomeprogramsrare genetic disorderresponsesafety assessmentsomatic cell gene editingsuccesstooltrial design
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences
CFDA Code
310
DUNS Number
043207562
UEI
FL6GV84CKN57
Project Start Date
20-September-2023
Project End Date
31-July-2026
Budget Start Date
01-August-2024
Budget End Date
31-July-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$10,834,632
Direct Costs
$8,011,961
Indirect Costs
$5,399,076
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
NIH Office of the Director
$10,834,632
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5UG3TR004713-02
Publications
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Outcomes
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