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. 2021 Jun 3;28(6):1136-1147.e5.
doi: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.02.002. Epub 2021 Feb 23.

Quantitative evaluation of chromosomal rearrangements in gene-edited human stem cells by CAST-Seq

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Quantitative evaluation of chromosomal rearrangements in gene-edited human stem cells by CAST-Seq

Giandomenico Turchiano et al. Cell Stem Cell. .
Free article

Abstract

Genome editing has shown great promise for clinical translation but also revealed the risk of genotoxicity caused by off-target effects of programmable nucleases. Here we describe chromosomal aberrations analysis by single targeted linker-mediated PCR sequencing (CAST-Seq), a preclinical assay to identify and quantify chromosomal aberrations derived from on-target and off-target activities of CRISPR-Cas nucleases or transcriptional activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), respectively, in human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). Depending on the employed designer nuclease, CAST-Seq detected translocations in 0%-0.5% of gene-edited human CD34+ HSCs, and up to 20% of on-target loci harbored gross rearrangements. Moreover, CAST-Seq detected distinct types of chromosomal aberrations, such as homology-mediated translocations, that are mediated by homologous recombination and not off-target activity. CAST-Seq is a sensitive assay able to identify and quantify unintended chromosomal rearrangements in addition to the more typical mutations at off-target sites. CAST-Seq analyses may be particularly relevant for therapeutic genome editing to enable thorough risk assessment before clinical application of gene-edited products.

Keywords: CRISPR-Cas; chromosomal aberrations; chromosomal rearrangements; clinical risk assessment; designer nucleases; gene editing; off-target activity; off-target effects; programmable nucleases; translocations.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of interests G.T., G.A., G.B., G.M., M.B., and T.C. have filed a patent application for CAST-Seq. T.C. and T.I.C. have sponsored research collaborations with Cellectis and Miltenyi Biotec.

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