AI Article Synopsis

  • SF3B1 is a critical RNA splicing gene frequently mutated in cancer, but studying its pathogenic effects has been challenging due to the lack of suitable cell line models.
  • By comparing various genome editing techniques, the study found that prime editing, specifically using PE5max, was the most effective method for introducing the SF3B1 K700E mutation in multiple cell lines.
  • The researchers introduced this mutation into chronic lymphocytic leukemia cell lines using a novel approach called PRECIS, which not only mimicked key mutant characteristics but also revealed new insights into the mutation's role in cancer progression and genome instability.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: SF3B1 is the most recurrently mutated RNA splicing gene in cancer. However, research of its pathogenic role has been hindered by a lack of disease-relevant cell line models. Here, our study compared four genome engineering platforms to establish SF3B1 mutant cell lines: CRISPR-Cas9 editing, AAV homology-directed repair editing, base editing (ABEmax, ABE8e), and prime editing (PE2, PE3, PE5max). We showed that prime editing via PE5max achieved the most efficient SF3B1 K700E editing across a wide range of cell lines. Our approach was further refined by coupling prime editing with a fluorescent reporter that leverages a SF3B1 mutation-responsive synthetic intron to mark successfully edited cells. By applying this approach, called prime editing coupled intron-assisted selection (PRECIS), we introduced the K700E hotspot mutation into two chronic lymphocytic leukemia cell lines, HG-3 and MEC-1. We demonstrated that our PRECIS-engineered cells faithfully recapitulate known mutant SF3B1 phenotypes, including altered splicing, copy number variations, and cell-growth defect. Moreover, we discovered that the SF3B1 mutation can cause the loss of Y chromosome in chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Our results showcase that PRECIS is an efficient and generalizable method for engineering genetically faithful SF3B1 mutant models. Our approach provides new insights on the role of SF3B1 mutation in cancer and enables the generation of SF3B1 mutant cell lines in relevant cellular context.

Significance: This study developed an approach that can reliably and efficiently engineer SF3B1 mutation into different cellular contexts, thereby revealing novel roles of SF3B1 mutation in driving aberrant splicing, clonal evolution, and genome instability.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11421219PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/2767-9764.CRC-24-0145DOI Listing

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