Development and Application of New Genome Editing Tools for the Functional Investigation of Genetic Variants of Uncertain Significance

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R35 · $50,462 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Komor – Project Summary/Abstract – “Development and Application of New Genome Editing Tools for the Functional Investigation of Genetic Variants of Uncertain Significance” My research program aims to combat the variant interpretation problem that looms over the field of precision medicine: out of 4.6 million missense variants identified in the Genome Aggregation Database, over half are admitted to be variants of uncertain significance (VUS). New methods to enable the interpretation and functional characterization of these VUS would not only enhance the efficacy of current therapies by better informing patient selection strategies, but also accelerate the development of new approaches to combat diseases with a genetic component. Targeted genome editing, the introduction of a specific modification in genomic DNA, has the potential to allow researchers to study and better understand mechanisms of human genetic diseases, but traditional genome editing methods (including CRISPR-Cas9) suffer from modest genome editing efficiencies as well as unwanted gene alterations, particularly when attempting to introduce point mutations due to their reliance on double-stranded DNA breaks (DSBs). Recently, I developed a class of genome editing agents called base editors that does not involve DSBs, but rather uses a catalytically inactive Cas9 tethered to a single-stranded DNA modifying enzyme to directly chemically modify target nucleobases in genomic DNA. Two classes of editors currently exist, which use cytosine and adenine deamination chemistries to catalyze the conversion of C•G base pairs to T•A (CBEs), and A•T base pairs to G•C (ABEs), respectively. My research program involves both the development of new base editor methodologies, as well as the utilization of currently available base editor tools to functionally interrogate VUS. Direction 1 research aims to develop new base editors capable of facilitating new point mutations using computationally-aided directed evolution. The resulting tools will be of broad interest to the scientific community as they will enable researchers to cleanly and efficiently install additional types of point mutations into the genome of living cells, enabling the study and potential treatment of human genetic diseases. Direction 2 research endeavors to initiate the first investigation into the pathogenicity of co-occurring VUS (i.e. when a given individual has two or more VUS in their genome) through the development of orthogonal base editing. Bioinformatic analyses of ours suggest that the clinical interpretation of missense variants is being convoluted by their frequent co-occurrence with other uninterpreted variants, and the development of orthogonal base editing will allow us to functionally interrogate these co-occurring variants and assess their contribution to human genetic diseases. Finally, Direction 3 research proposes the development of high-throughput base editing, which will allow for the functional investigation of ...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10467666
Project number
3R35GM138317-02S1
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO
Principal Investigator
Alexis C. Komor
Activity code
R35
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$50,462
Award type
3
Project period
2020-09-01 → 2025-08-31