Abstract

Mutations in more than 200 retina-specific genes have been associated with inherited retinal diseases. Genome editing represents a promising emerging field in the treatment of monogenic disorders, as it aims to correct disease-causing mutations within the genome. Genome editing relies on highly specific endonucleases and the capacity of the cells to repair double-strand breaks (DSBs). As DSB pathways are cell-cycle dependent, their activity in postmitotic retinal neurons, with a focus on photoreceptors, needs to be assessed in order to develop therapeutic in vivo genome editing. Three DSB-repair pathways are found in mammalian cells: Non-homologous end joining (NHEJ); microhomology-mediated end joining (MMEJ); and homology-directed repair (HDR). While NHEJ can be used to knock out mutant alleles in dominant disorders, HDR and MMEJ are better suited for precise genome editing, or for replacing entire mutation hotspots in genomic regions. Here, we analyzed transcriptomic in vivo and in vitro data and revealed that HDR is indeed downregulated in postmitotic neurons, whereas MMEJ and NHEJ are active. Using single-cell RNA sequencing analysis, we characterized the dynamics of DSB repair pathways in the transition from dividing cells to postmitotic retinal cells. Time-course bulk RNA-seq data confirmed DSB repair gene expression in both in vivo and in vitro samples. Transcriptomic DSB repair pathway profiles are very similar in adult human, macaque, and mouse retinas, but not in ground squirrel retinas. Moreover, human-induced pluripotent stem-cell-derived neurons and retinal organoids can serve as well suited in vitro testbeds for developing genomic engineering approaches in photoreceptors. Our study provides additional support for designing precise in vivo genome-editing approaches via MMEJ, which is active in mature photoreceptors.

Highlights

  • Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a group of disorders with a prevalence of 1 in 3-4000 people [1]

  • Due to the complexity of the visual system, several hundred proteins are uniquely expressed in photoreceptors and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells, and mutations in over 200 genes have been associated with IRDs [2]

  • We described human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons as a good in vitro model of human retinal double-strand breaks (DSBs) repair activity based on the DSB repair-gene expression profile

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Summary

Introduction

Inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are a group of disorders with a prevalence of 1 in 3-4000 people [1]. To study the DSB repair pathway dynamics during the PR differentiation, a subset of cells representing the progenitors-to-PR branch (purple cluster in Figure 2a) was further characterized This sample was reanalyzed, giving the same organization as before on a two-dimensional UMAP analysis, but it resulted in a slightly different clustering (Figure 2b). All the datasets consistently showed that gene expression in the HDR and MMEJ pathways was higher when the cells were cycling; in contrast, NHEJ gene expression did not decrease suddenly when the cells stopped cycling (Figure 2d) These results showed that the transcriptomic profile of the DSB pathways can serve as a proxy of their activity and that the human in vitro model mimicked well the retinal in vivo pathway activity

Photoreceptor DSB Pathway Activity
Curated Gene List for DSB Pathways
Bulk RNA-Seq Processing Pipeline
Single-Cell RNA-Seq Processing Pipeline
Mouse Embryo scRNA-Seq Analysis
Cell-Cycle and DSB Pathway Correlation in Bulk Time Course RNA-Seq
Comparison of Mammal Retina and iNGN
Organoid scRNA-Seq Analysis
Findings
Retinal Organoid Immunocytochemistry
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