Abstract

The use of alternative promoters for the cell type-specific expression of a given mRNA/protein is a common cell strategy. NEMO is a scaffold protein required for canonical NF-κB signaling. Transcription of the NEMO gene is primarily controlled by two promoters: one (promoter B) drives NEMO transcription in most cell types and the second (promoter D) is largely responsible for NEMO transcription in liver cells. Herein, we have used a CRISPR/Cas9-based approach to disrupt a core sequence element of promoter B, and this genetic editing essentially eliminates expression of NEMO mRNA and protein in 293T human kidney cells. By cell subcloning, we have isolated targeted 293T cell lines that express no detectable NEMO protein, have defined genomic alterations at promoter B, and do not support activation of canonical NF-κB signaling in response to treatment with tumor necrosis factor. Nevertheless, non-canonical NF-κB signaling is intact in these NEMO-deficient cells. Expression of ectopic wild-type NEMO, but not certain human NEMO disease mutants, in the edited cells restores downstream NF-κB signaling in response to tumor necrosis factor. Targeting of the promoter B element does not substantially reduce NEMO expression (from promoter D) in the human SNU-423 liver cancer cell line. Thus, we have created a strategy for selectively eliminating cell type-specific expression from an alternative promoter and have generated 293T cell lines with a functional knockout of NEMO. The implications of these findings for further studies and for therapeutic approaches to target canonical NF-κB signaling are discussed.

Highlights

  • Much functional gene diversity in humans is generated by the use of alternative splicing and alternative promoters [1, 2]

  • Within exon 1B, we noted a sequence (ACCGCGAAACT) that is just downstream of a major transcription start site (TSS) of the NEMO gene, and that is within a consensus sequence that is located near the TSS of many genes [21] (Fig 1A)

  • As a first step in testing that hypothesis, we sought to disrupt the predicted exon 1B core promoter element by CRISPR/Cas9 targeting in 293T cells using lentiviral transduction of Cas9 and a gRNA targeting the identified site

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Summary

Methods

Detailed descriptions of all plasmids and primers used in this paper are presented in Tables B and C in S1 File. Plasmids pcDNA-FLAG and pcDNA-FLAG-NEMO have been described previously [44]. Other pcDNA-FLAG mutants of NEMO are described in Table B of S1 File. The gRNA sequences targeting the NEMO exon 1B core promoter (quality score = 96; 39 off-target sites; crispr.mit.edu) or a control sequence (labelled C in Fig 2B) slightly downstream of the exon 1B site (Table C of S1 File) were synthesized with overhangs and were ligated into BsmBI-digested plentiCRISPRv2.0. Full-length dCas was subcloned into the LentiCRISPR v2.0 plasmid, and confirmed by DNA sequencing. The relevant portions of plentiCRISPRv2.0-gRNA and pLentiCRISPRv2-dCas plasmids containing inserts were verified by DNA sequencing

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