Dear Editor,
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a primary myocardial disorder featured by left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and cardiac dysfunction with an estimated global morbidity of 1:200–1:500.1 HCM has severe clinical manifestations including heart failure, arrhythmia, sudden cardiac death and stroke. Myosin-binding protein C3 (MYBPC3) mutations account for more than 40% pathogenic variants causing HCM.2 Homozygous or compound heterozygous truncating variants of MYBPC3 are leading genetic causes of fetal and childhood-onset HCM characterized by heart failure and life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias.3 Currently available medications fail to rescue these infants. Base editing is a form of genome editing that enables direct conversion of individual nucleotides at specific genomic sites, without introducing a double-strand DNA break.4,5 Over the last few years, base editing has emerged as a powerful technology to change or generate genetic variants in a wide range of mitotic and postmitotic cells.6,7,8
To evaluate the potential of base editing to cure cardiomyopathy induced by homozygous MYBPC3 premature termination codon mutation, using CRISPR-Cas9 technique, we generated a mouse model bearing Mybpc3 c.2836 C > T (p.R946X) mutation (Mybpc3R946X/R946X) analogous to human MYBPC3 p.R943X mutation that resulted in an early termination at amino acid 946 (Supplementary information, Fig. S1a, b).9,10 Sanger sequencing validated the correct installation of c.2836 C > T to exon 27 in the mouse genome (Supplementary information, Fig. S1c). Mybpc3 protein was undetectable in A-bands of Mybpc3R946X/R946X cardiomyocytes (Supplementary information, Fig. S1d, e). We further performed serial echocardiography and observed LV hypertrophy with increased thickness of ventricular free wall in Mybpc3R946X/R946X mice (Supplementary information, Fig. S2a). The LV internal diameter at diastole and systole increased significantly from the age of 2 months. In accordance with the chamber dilation, ejection fraction (EF), a measure of systolic function, declined to ~1/3 of that of the wild-type (WT) mice at 2 months of age. Although heart function declined at an early stage, Mybpc3R946X/R946X mice survived for over 12 months.
Furthermore, we performed a postmortem examination at the age of 6 months. Compared to Mybpc3R946X/+ and Mybpc3WT, Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts were significantly larger with heart weight-to-tibia length (HW/TL) ratio being ~2-fold over that of the WT hearts (Supplementary information, Fig. S2b, c). Coronal sections illustrated the enlarged LV chamber, thickened myocardial walls and myofiber disarray of Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts (Supplementary information, Fig. S2d, e). Cardiomyocyte area revealed by wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) staining was significantly greater in Mybpc3R946X/R946X mice, indicating the occurrence of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy (Supplementary information, Fig. S2f, g). Excessive interstitial and perivascular collagen deposition was also observed in 12-week-old Mybpc3R946X/R946X mouse hearts, along with elevated expression of hypertrophic markers Acta1 and Nppa (Supplementary information, Fig. S2h–j). We further measured the cardiac surface electrocardiogram (ECG) and revealed consistently prolonged QRS interval in the Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts indicating LV hypertrophy (Supplementary information, Fig. S2k, l). Overall, these results demonstrated that introducing the homozygous Mybpc3R946X/R946X mutation leads to cardiomyopathy in neonatal mice that recapitulates key features of patients with biallelic MYBPC3-truncating variants.9
To correct Mybpc3 c.2836 C > T mutation, we employed an adenine base editor (ABE) that catalyzes A·T to G·C conversion. Among the reported ABEs, ABEmax with its TadA-7.10 adenine deaminase has a narrow editing window, relatively high on-target activity and low bystander activity (Supplementary information, Fig. S3a).5 SpCas9 nickase used in ABEmax has an NGG protospacer adjacent motif (PAM), which precludes the c.2836 C > T mutation from being positioned within the editing window. To circumvent this restriction, we used SpRY-ABEmax which can target nearly all PAMs by replacing SpCas9 nickase with its PAMless variant SpRYCas9 nickase (Supplementary information, Fig. S3b).11 To edit mutant A on the bottom target DNA strand (A6 in sgRNA1) specifically and avoid including other adenines (A2 and A8 in sgRNA1), we designed two sgRNAs (sgRNA1&2) with CCC and GCC PAMs respectively (Supplementary information, Fig. S3a). Since SpRYCas9 is predicted to favor TGC PAM over NCN PAMs, we added another sgRNA (sgRNA3) with TGC PAM, although this moved the mutant A (A8 in sgRNA3) one position out of the high-activity window.
To evaluate editing efficiency of SpRY-ABEmax in vitro, we isolated mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from Mybpc3R946X/R946X embryos and used lentivirus to efficiently introduce SpRY-ABEmax (Supplementary information, Fig. S3d). Since in vivo delivery would utilize adeno-associated virus (AAV), and SpRY-ABEmax (6.5 kb) exceeds the capacity of a single AAV, we split SpRY-ABEmax into two parts using trans-splicing intein (Supplementary information, Fig. S3c).6 The N- and C-terminal parts of SpRY-ABEmax were expressed in MEF cells, and 35% of them spontaneously assembled into full-length SpRY-ABEmax (Supplementary information, Fig. S3e). High-throughput sequencing (HT-seq) showed that the editing efficiencies of three sgRNAs were 0.21% ± 0.02%, 4.74% ± 1.18% and 4.53% ± 1.77% respectively (Supplementary information, Fig. S3f). All three guide RNAs displayed low bystander editing efficiencies at other adenines in the protospacer except A4 in the sgRNA3 (Supplementary information, Fig. S3f).
The insufficient Mybpc3 mutation correction of SpRY-ABEmax compelled us to develop an editor with superior editing activity. TadA-8e-V106W is an artificially evolved deaminase with higher editing activity than TadA-7.10 along with low RNA editing activty.12 We fused TadA-8e-V106W with SpRYCas9 and named it SpRY-ABE8e (Supplementary information, Fig. S4a, b). We used the same sgRNAs (sgRNA1–3) and trans-splicing intein strategy to express SpRY-ABE8e in Mybpc3R946X/R946X MEFs, and 32% of them assembled into full-length SpRY-ABE8e (Supplementary information, Fig. S4c). Compared to SpRY-ABEmax, SpRY-ABE8e with sgRNA2 and sgRNA3 demonstrated significantly higher on-target editing efficiency (Supplementary information, Fig. S4d).
The bystander editing (A2 in sgRNA1) of SpRY-ABE8e also increased and altered the encoded amino acid from valine (V) to alanine (A), which share nonpolar and aliphatic traits. Structure prediction using AlphaFold2 indicated that the V to A substitution did not change MYBPC3 3D structure (Supplementary information, Fig. S5a). Off-target editing is another potential complication of base editing. To examine the off-target editing of SpRY-ABE8e, we selected 17 top-ranked off-target sites containing 81 to 103 editable adenines as predicted by Cas-OFFinder for each sgRNA and performed HT-seq (Supplementary information, Fig. S6a). SgRNA2 and sgRNA3 demonstrated low off-target editing activities at all the tested adenine sites except one, while sgRNA1 had high off-target editing activity at 4 adenine sites (Supplementary information, Fig. S5b). Based on these results, sgRNA2 was chosen for the following in vivo experiments.
For efficient delivery of SpRY-ABE8e to the cardiomyocytes in vivo, we packaged it as split inteins into AAV9 (Fig. 1a). Cardiomyocyte-specific expression was driven by the chicken cardiac troponin T (cTnT) promoter. We injected two doses of AAV-SpRY-ABE8e (low: 0.5 × 1014 vg/kg per AAV; high: 1 × 1014 vg/kg per AAV) to evaluate efficacy and dose-response relationship. AAV9 was administered by subcutaneous injection into Mybpc3R946X/R946X mice at postnatal (P) days 0 to 3. Saline was served as the vehicle control (Fig. 1b).
Six months after the administration, high-dose SpRY-ABE8e introduced an average of 9.56% A > G transition at the target adenine (Fig. 1c), while 4.64% by low-dose injection (Supplementary information, Fig. S7c). Since cardiomyocytes only account for ~25%–35% cells in the heart,13 the editing efficiency of the high-dose SpRY-ABE8e was estimated to be ~30% in cardiomyocytes. Consistent with this estimation, immunofluorescence (IF) staining demonstrated that high-dose SpRY-ABE8e recovered MYBPC3 protein in 32.2% ± 8.5% cardiomyocytes (Supplementary information, Fig. S7d). The majority of the corrected cardiomyocytes were clustered rather in a single form, indicating that they bear the proliferative potential (Supplementary information, Fig. S7e). In corrected cells, MYBPC3 localized appropriately to sarcomere A-bands (Fig. 1d). α-Actinin expression was higher and more aligned in the corrected cardiomyocytes than in the uncorrected ones (Supplementary information, Fig. S7f). We observed low bystander editing activity compared to on-target editing (Fig. 1c). Moreover, over 99% of the bystander editing happened together with the on-target editing (Supplementary information, Fig. S7b). We also measured genome editing induced by high-dose SpRY-ABE8e in liver, lung, spleen and quadriceps muscle and found very low editing frequencies, indicating that the editing is cardiomyocyte specific (Supplementary information, Fig. S7g).
Unexpectedly, high-dose SpRY-ABE8e treatment restored 78%–110% of MYBPC3 protein expression, and low-dose SpRY-ABE8e treatment restored 38%–70% of MYBPC3 protein, which were higher than the ratio of gene correction (Supplementary information, Fig. S7h, i). We reasoned that this discrepancy was possibly due to transcriptional activation or enhanced protein stability in the gene-corrected cells, which had been observed in several in vivo base editing settings.6,14,15 To compare with AAV9-mediated gene replacement, we also treated Mybpc3R946X/R946X mice with AAV-Mybpc3 at the same dose to high-dose SpRY-ABE8e (Fig. 1b) and the AAV-Mybpc3 treatment only recovered 41.4% ± 4.6% of MYBPC3 protein (Supplementary information, Fig. S7h, i). Episomal expression of MYBPC3 may be lost or diluted during the neonatal cardiomyocyte growth, but which was refrained from the SpRY-ABE8e-mediated genomic correction. Although the mechanism remains unsolved, our results indicate that base editing possesses a greater potential over gene replacement to restore MYBPC3 expression in the Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts at neonatal stage.
In agreement with high MYBPC3 recovery, serial echocardiography illuminated that high-dose SpRY-ABE8e significantly improved systolic heart function, chamber dilation and wall thickening from the age of 2 months to 6 months in Mybpc3R946X/R946X mice (Fig. 1e; Supplementary information, Fig. S8a). Low-dose SpRY-ABE8e also significantly improved systolic function but not the chamber diameter and wall thickness, and similar results were found with AAV-Mybpc3. Of note, the beneficial effects of low-dose SpRY-ABE8e and AAV-Mybpc3 on EF declined at 6 months compared to 2 months, whereas high-dose SpRY-ABE8e’s efficacy was retained if not improved at 6 months. In consistent with functional improvement, high-dose SpRY-ABE8e significantly attenuated QRS interval prolongation (Supplementary information, Fig. S8b, c). Together, these results underscore the importance of MYBPC3 protein recovery that accounts for preventing pathological remodeling in Mybpc3 mutant mice.
Furthermore, postmortem analysis showed that high-dose but not low-dose SpRY-ABE8e or AAV-Mybpc3 prevented cardiac enlargement, which was further confirmed by HW/TL ratio and short axis of histological sections (Fig. 1f–h). The disarray of muscle bundles was improved as well (Fig. 1i). In comparison, low-dose SpRY-ABE8e and AAV-Mybpc3 improved the bundle disarray, ventricular dilation, and wall thickness to a limited extent. WGA staining revealed that low-dose SpRY-ABE8e, high-dose SpRY-ABE8e and AAV-Mybpc3 all reduced cardiomyocyte cross-sectional area (Supplementary information, Fig. S8d, e). All three treatments reduced fibrosis, especially high-dose SpRY-ABE8e, which reduced fibrosis by 61.5% compared to saline treatment (Fig. 1j, k; Supplementary information, Fig. S8f). Together, these assays demonstrated that high-dose base editor offered significantly better therapeutic effects than AAV-Mybpc3, suggesting a greater potential of base editing as a strategy to prevent cardiomyopathy.
To further examine transcriptomic changes of Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts after base editing, we performed bulk RNA-seq and identified 727 genes differentially expressed between Mybpc3R946X/R946X and WT hearts (Supplementary information, Fig. S9a, b). The transcriptomic profile of SpRY-ABE8e-treated Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts became more like WT hearts compared with saline-treated Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts. GO analysis showed that functions of these DEGs were associated with extracellular matrix deposition, muscle development and hypertrophy, and cardiac conduction (Fig. 1m). Comparing high-dose SpRY-ABE8e to saline treatment identified 137 DEGs. These genes had overlapping functions to genes differentially expressed between the mutant and WT mice, indicating that the same class of genes remained affected. Further exploration of RNA-seq data revealed a decrease in heart failure genes including Acta1, Nppa/Nppb, and collagen-related genes including Col4a4 and Ecm2; as well as a recovery of cardiac development- and conduction-related genes after SpRY-ABE8e treatment (Fig. 1l). The expression of Acta1 and Nppa was also reduced after low-dose SpRY-ABE8e and Mybpc3 treatments while the changes were more significant in high-dose SpRY-ABE8e-treated mice (Supplementary information, Fig. S9c). These results show that SpRY-ABE8e base editing ameliorates the dysregulated gene expression in Mybpc3R946X/R946X hearts.
To assess off-target editing by SpRY-ABE8e, we isolated genomic DNA from the hearts and measured off-target editing at 17 sites analyzed in MEFs. In agreement with in vitro results, dual AAV-SpRY-ABE8e introduced nearly background off-target editing in hearts (Supplementary information, Fig. S9d). To assess potential RNA deaminase activity of SpRY-ABE8e, we analyzed the RNA-seq data and detected minimal and comparable adenine-to-inosine editing of mRNA in high-dose SpRY-ABE8e-treated hearts compared to the saline-treated ones (Supplementary information, Fig. S9e). These results demonstrate that our dual AAV9-SpRY-ABE8e system has negligible DNA and RNA off-target activities in the hearts.
In this study, we generated a transgenic murine model bearing a human MYBPC3-truncating variant that developed early-onset, severe cardiomyopathy with rapid evolution to cardiac dysfunction, recapitulating key features of patients with biallelic MYBPC3 pathogenic variants. We developed a potent, PAM-extended dual base editor that efficiently and precisely corrected the Mybpc3 nonsense mutation, thereby preventing cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction in the mutant mouse model. In sum, our study, in line with others demonstrates the great potential of base editing as a new therapeutic modality to treat genetic cardiomyopathy, which lays out a foundation for future applications in clinics.7,8
Data availability
DNA sequencing files can be accessed at the National Center for Biotechnology Information Sequence Read Archive (NCBI SRA) with the accession code PRJNA1000763. Raw and processed RNA-seq data are deposited to the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database and available with the accession number GSE239872.
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Acknowledgements
We sincerely thank Drs. Xiaodong Liang, Huijing Yu and Pengyi Yan for assistance with histology assays, MEF isolation and AAV production; Zixuan Li & Li Liu for helpful suggestions; Mei Gao and Xi Liu (Instrumental Analysis Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University) for assistance with echocardiography assays. This work is supported by the National Foundation of Distinguished Young Scholar (82225006 to B.Z.), the National Key R&D Program of China (2020YFA0803800, 2020YFA0803802 to B.Z.), the Innovation Program of the Shanghai Municipal Education Commission (2021-01-07-00-02-E00088 to B.Z.), WLA Program of Shanghai Science and Technology Commission (21dz2210202, 21dz2210200 to B.Z.), and SJTU STAR Award (YG2021ZD11, YG2022ZD023 to B.Z.).
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B.Z., S.W., P.Y., W.T.P., Y.Z. and D.Z. designed the experiments, analyzed the data and wrote the manuscript; S.W., Y.G.L., Z.Z.G. and Y.M.L. performed the experiments and analyzed the data; S.W. and Z.L.G analyzed the HT-seq and RNA-seq data; S.Z., J.X., X.G. and H.H. helped perform echocardiography and electrocardiography. B.Z. supervised the project.
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Wu, S., Yang, P., Geng, Z. et al. Base editing effectively prevents early-onset severe cardiomyopathy in Mybpc3 mutant mice. Cell Res 34, 327–330 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41422-024-00930-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41422-024-00930-7