Kramer NJ, Haney MS, Morgens DW, Jovičić A, Couthouis J, Li A, Ousey J, Ma R, Bieri G, Tsui CK, Shi Y, Hertz NT, Tessier-Lavigne M, Ichida JK, Bassik MC, Gitler AD. CRISPR-Cas9 screens in human cells and primary neurons identify modifiers of C9ORF72 dipeptide-repeat-protein toxicity. Nat Genet. 2018 Apr;50(4):603-612. Epub 2018 Mar 5 PubMed.
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Director of Neuromuscular Medicine, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
This is another great paper by the Gitler and Bassik groups, using the power of genetic screens to identify previously unanticipated modifiers of dipeptide toxicity from C9ORF72 repeat expansion. The beauty of their approach is that it immediately provides a target for drug screening, and a therapeutic avenue toward the clinic. It will be very exciting to see whether manipulating TMX2 can be used for therapeutic intervention in C9ORF72 ALS/FTD in the future.
View all comments by Robert BalohNeurobiology, KU Leuven & VIB
The group of Aaron Gitler is the first one to successfully perform a genome-wide gene knockout screen using CRISPR–Cas9 in a human cells system to search for suppressors and enhancers of C9ORF72 DPR toxicity.
First of all, this study provides clear proof of principle that such a CRISPR-Cas9 screen in the context of ALS is feasible in human cells, as well as in mouse primary cortical neurons. Moreover, and very importantly, the obtained hits were unique for the DPR-induced toxicity and didn’t overlap with hits of other unrelated toxicity screens.
Second, it is very encouraging that there is considerable overlap between the hits in the PR and GR toxicity screen. This indicates that similar pathways are involved in the induction of toxicity, which is in line with what one could expect.
Third, these CRISPR-Cas9 screens could also provide interesting new insights into the pathways playing a role in the toxicity induced by synthetic arginine-containing DPRs or PR translated from a codon-optimized construct. At present, the screen using the human cell system especially confirms the importance of a number of pathways that have already been linked to DPR-induced toxicity in other systems, which is also very encouraging. These include nucleocytoplasmic transport, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, proteasomal dysfunction, involvement of RNA-processing as well as of chromatin modifications. A very interesting observation is the involvement of RAB7A and the endosomal pathway in the uptake of DPRs. This could have important implications for the cell-to-cell spreading of DPRs.
Finally, it is very interesting that one modifier, TMX2, modulated the ER-stress signature elicited by C9ORF72 DPRs in neurons and also improved survival of human induced motor neurons (iMNs) from patients with C9ORF72 ALS. Moreover, the major importance of ER stress could also be confirmed pharmacologically.
In conclusion, it is very clear that the information obtained from these genome-wide screens will be an important source of modifiers that can be tested for their effect in other systems, and that could lead to the development of new therapeutic strategies. Moreover, there is no doubt that more genome-wide CRISPR-Cas9-related screens will follow in other cell systems and in other toxicity paradigms related to ALS, given the fact that the feasibility and the potential success is convincingly shown by the current study.
View all comments by Ludo Van Den BoschInstitute for Multigenerational Studies
This work merits attention. It again truly shows that CRISPR/Cas9 is not only a tool for therapeutic genome editing but, compared with other genome-editing approaches, has the unique capacity for genome-wide screens and biological discovery. One can hope that the results of this work point to general mechanisms of ALS pathology that translate to other genotypes and sporadic cases, such that we can begin to consider genome editing or other approaches to develop a broad therapy for this devastating disease.
View all comments by J. David SchafferUniversity of Sheffield
Debate over dipeptide repeats (DPRs) continues, but undoubtedly they are toxic in culture. This important study from Aaron Gitler and Michael Bassik describes the first genome-wide screen for modifiers of DPR toxicity in a mammalian cell line. The genome-wide section of the work utilized K562 cells exposed to exogenous poly proline-arginine (PR) or poly glycine-arginine (GR). Interestingly, there was significant correlation between hits in response to both proteins (but zero overlap with a ricin toxicity screen), suggesting a common pathway for toxicity. This is not a “given” and will help to direct future model design centered on DPRs.
Hits from the K562 screen were validated in a number of ways, including exposing mouse primary cortical neurons to exogenous PR or using a lentivirus to induce endogenous PR expression. Interestingly, the method of PR delivery appeared to have a significant effect—both models validated hits from the original screen but the overlap was relatively small. This is particularly interesting when it is considered that neither system included RAN translation, which is the method by which DPR are produced in patients.
Top hits, which were extensively validated, implicate the ER stress response and, in the context of extracellular PR, the intracellular trafficking of PR. A number of other novel and established biological pathways were highlighted including nucleocytoplasmic transport.
The authors rightly highlight the current lack of supporting evidence of DPR toxicity in postmortem studies but in vitro, the field is making good progress towards therapeutic targets.
View all comments by Johnathan Cooper-KnockUniversity of Michigan
Here are my thoughts on the paper.
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