Lung and liver editing by lipid nanoparticle delivery of a stable CRISPR–Cas9 ribonucleoprotein

Kai Chen(Innovative Genomics Institute), Hesong Han(Innovative Genomics Institute), Sheng Zhao(Innovative Genomics Institute), Bryant Xu(Innovative Genomics Institute), Boyan Yin(Innovative Genomics Institute), Atip Lawanprasert(Innovative Genomics Institute), Marena Trinidad(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Benjamin W. Burgstone(Innovative Genomics Institute), Niren Murthy(Innovative Genomics Institute), Jennifer A. Doudna(QB3)
Nature Biotechnology
October 16, 2024
Cited by 113Open Access
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Abstract

Lipid nanoparticle (LNP) delivery of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) ribonucleoproteins (RNPs) could enable high-efficiency, low-toxicity and scalable in vivo genome editing if efficacious RNP-LNP complexes can be reliably produced. Here we engineer a thermostable Cas9 from Geobacillus stearothermophilus (GeoCas9) to generate iGeoCas9 variants capable of >100× more genome editing of cells and organs compared with the native GeoCas9 enzyme. Furthermore, iGeoCas9 RNP-LNP complexes edit a variety of cell types and induce homology-directed repair in cells receiving codelivered single-stranded DNA templates. Using tissue-selective LNP formulations, we observe genome-editing levels of 16‒37% in the liver and lungs of reporter mice that receive single intravenous injections of iGeoCas9 RNP-LNPs. In addition, iGeoCas9 RNPs complexed to biodegradable LNPs edit the disease-causing SFTPC gene in lung tissue with 19% average efficiency, representing a major improvement over genome-editing levels observed previously using viral or nonviral delivery strategies. These results show that thermostable Cas9 RNP-LNP complexes can expand the therapeutic potential of genome editing.


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