Gene editing of CD34+ progenitor cells from single blood donor waste bags to create cultured early erythroid cells for study of blood group knock-outs
(2020) The 36th International ISBT Congress, Virtual meeting In Vox Sanguinis 115(Suppl. s1). p.363-363- Abstract
- Background: Many blood group antigens are carried by red cell surface proteins, thefunctions of which are not yet fully characterized or in some cases completelyunknown. By investigating red cells with naturally-occurring blood group variants,much has been learnt about the underlying molecules. However, interindividualvariation affecting other molecules than the one(s) of interest may confound orotherwise hamper such studies. As an alternative, a reductionistic approach whereonly a single factor differs between test and control cells significantly facilitatesinterpretation of functional studies. Using various siRNA, shRNA and various gene-editing tools blood group expression can be manipulated and useful modelsdeveloped. Applying the... (More)
- Background: Many blood group antigens are carried by red cell surface proteins, thefunctions of which are not yet fully characterized or in some cases completelyunknown. By investigating red cells with naturally-occurring blood group variants,much has been learnt about the underlying molecules. However, interindividualvariation affecting other molecules than the one(s) of interest may confound orotherwise hamper such studies. As an alternative, a reductionistic approach whereonly a single factor differs between test and control cells significantly facilitatesinterpretation of functional studies. Using various siRNA, shRNA and various gene-editing tools blood group expression can be manipulated and useful modelsdeveloped. Applying the latter on primary hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells(HSPCs) can be challenging.Aims: We evaluated a protocol for gene editing of CD44 using a CRISPR/Cas9hybrid system on HSPCs isolated from blood donation leukocyte waste bags fromsingle donors to develop a model for study of blood group molecular function inerythropoiesis.Methods: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were from anonymizedleucocyte waste bags obtained after whole blood unit processing in the Reveosautomated blood component system. Cells were harvested following Lymphoprepgradient separation and CD34+HSPCs enriched and collected using magnetic beads.CD34+cells were cultured in 2-phase culture medium to generate erythroid cellsfrom HSPCs (Vidovic, Vox Sang 2017). For CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing, a short guideRNA (sgRNA) targeting CD44 was designed and cloned into the lentiCRISPR v2vector (Addgene plasmid #52961). A non-targeting sgRNA cloned into the vectorwas used as control. Lentivirus particles were produced in the human 293T cell lineas described previously (Galeev, Methods Mol Biol 2017). Equal number of CD34+cells were transduced 24 hours after collection using RetroNectin following theRetroNectin-Bound Virus (RBV) Infection Method according to manufacturer’sprotocol. Cells were transduced at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10 with atarget transduction efficiency of 20–30%. Cells were cultured at 37°C, 5% CO2 for72 hours in phase I culture medium and then electroporated with Cas9 mRNA usingthe ECM 830 Electroporation System as described previously for cord blood-derivedCD34+cells (Backstrom, Exp Hematol 2019). GFP+CD44-edited cell frequencieswere monitored by flow cytometry at day 7 of the HSPC expansion phase and atday 14 of the erythroid expansion-differentiation phase using antibodies againsterythroid-specific cell surface markers GPA and Band3 in addition to CD49d toassess the erythroid development stage.Results: We tested the above protocol and observed that the frequencies of editedcells lacking CD44 expression within the GFP+population at day 7 of culture were10–25% while the edited frequencies were increased at day 14 of culture to 60–80%within the GFP+cells. Whilst this stage corresponds to erythroblasts, earlier or laterstages can be tested.Summary/Conclusions: The previously established hybrid system for CRISPR/Cas9gene editing in cord blood-derived CD34+HSPCs, which combines lentiviraldelivery of the sgRNA with transient delivery of Cas9 mRNA by electroporation, isalso applicable to primary human adult HSPCs from Reveos-processed single-donorwhole blood donation, resulting in a traceable high-yield gene-editing system tostudy blood group function and erythroid development (Less)
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https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/b583b313-e458-490d-8e98-15bec4cb4cab
- author
- Alattar, AG
LU
; Bäckström, A LU ; Flygare, J LU ; Storry, J LU ; Larsson, J LU and Olsson, ML LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2020
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Vox Sanguinis
- volume
- 115
- issue
- Suppl. s1
- article number
- P-851
- pages
- 363 - 363
- publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- conference name
- The 36th International ISBT Congress, Virtual meeting
- conference dates
- 2020-12-12 - 2020-12-16
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:85098026792
- ISSN
- 1423-0410
- DOI
- 10.1111/vox.13031
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b583b313-e458-490d-8e98-15bec4cb4cab
- date added to LUP
- 2022-03-30 16:55:47
- date last changed
- 2025-04-04 17:12:51
@misc{b583b313-e458-490d-8e98-15bec4cb4cab, abstract = {{Background: Many blood group antigens are carried by red cell surface proteins, thefunctions of which are not yet fully characterized or in some cases completelyunknown. By investigating red cells with naturally-occurring blood group variants,much has been learnt about the underlying molecules. However, interindividualvariation affecting other molecules than the one(s) of interest may confound orotherwise hamper such studies. As an alternative, a reductionistic approach whereonly a single factor differs between test and control cells significantly facilitatesinterpretation of functional studies. Using various siRNA, shRNA and various gene-editing tools blood group expression can be manipulated and useful modelsdeveloped. Applying the latter on primary hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells(HSPCs) can be challenging.Aims: We evaluated a protocol for gene editing of CD44 using a CRISPR/Cas9hybrid system on HSPCs isolated from blood donation leukocyte waste bags fromsingle donors to develop a model for study of blood group molecular function inerythropoiesis.Methods: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were from anonymizedleucocyte waste bags obtained after whole blood unit processing in the Reveosautomated blood component system. Cells were harvested following Lymphoprepgradient separation and CD34+HSPCs enriched and collected using magnetic beads.CD34+cells were cultured in 2-phase culture medium to generate erythroid cellsfrom HSPCs (Vidovic, Vox Sang 2017). For CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing, a short guideRNA (sgRNA) targeting CD44 was designed and cloned into the lentiCRISPR v2vector (Addgene plasmid #52961). A non-targeting sgRNA cloned into the vectorwas used as control. Lentivirus particles were produced in the human 293T cell lineas described previously (Galeev, Methods Mol Biol 2017). Equal number of CD34+cells were transduced 24 hours after collection using RetroNectin following theRetroNectin-Bound Virus (RBV) Infection Method according to manufacturer’sprotocol. Cells were transduced at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 10 with atarget transduction efficiency of 20–30%. Cells were cultured at 37°C, 5% CO2 for72 hours in phase I culture medium and then electroporated with Cas9 mRNA usingthe ECM 830 Electroporation System as described previously for cord blood-derivedCD34+cells (Backstrom, Exp Hematol 2019). GFP+CD44-edited cell frequencieswere monitored by flow cytometry at day 7 of the HSPC expansion phase and atday 14 of the erythroid expansion-differentiation phase using antibodies againsterythroid-specific cell surface markers GPA and Band3 in addition to CD49d toassess the erythroid development stage.Results: We tested the above protocol and observed that the frequencies of editedcells lacking CD44 expression within the GFP+population at day 7 of culture were10–25% while the edited frequencies were increased at day 14 of culture to 60–80%within the GFP+cells. Whilst this stage corresponds to erythroblasts, earlier or laterstages can be tested.Summary/Conclusions: The previously established hybrid system for CRISPR/Cas9gene editing in cord blood-derived CD34+HSPCs, which combines lentiviraldelivery of the sgRNA with transient delivery of Cas9 mRNA by electroporation, isalso applicable to primary human adult HSPCs from Reveos-processed single-donorwhole blood donation, resulting in a traceable high-yield gene-editing system tostudy blood group function and erythroid development}}, author = {{Alattar, AG and Bäckström, A and Flygare, J and Storry, J and Larsson, J and Olsson, ML}}, issn = {{1423-0410}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Conference Abstract}}, number = {{Suppl. s1}}, pages = {{363--363}}, publisher = {{Wiley-Blackwell}}, series = {{Vox Sanguinis}}, title = {{Gene editing of CD34+ progenitor cells from single blood donor waste bags to create cultured early erythroid cells for study of blood group knock-outs}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/vox.13031}}, doi = {{10.1111/vox.13031}}, volume = {{115}}, year = {{2020}}, }