Characterization
of Rationally Designed CRISPR/Cas9-Based
DNA Methyltransferases with Distinct Methyltransferase and Gene Silencing
Activities in Human Cell Lines and Primary Human T Cells
posted on 2025-02-03, 12:43authored byRosa Selenia Guerra-Resendez, Samantha LeGoff Lydon, Alex J. Ma, Guy C. Bedford, Daniel R. Reed, Sunghwan Kim, Erik R. Terán, Tomoki Nishiguchi, Mario Escobar, Andrew R. DiNardo, Isaac B. Hilton
Nuclease-deactivated Cas (dCas) proteins can be used
to recruit
epigenetic effectors, and this class of epigenetic editing technologies
has revolutionized the ability to synthetically control the mammalian
epigenome and transcriptome. DNA methylation is one of the most important
and well-characterized epigenetic modifications in mammals, and while
many different forms of dCas-based DNA methyltransferases (dCas-DNMTs)
have been developed for programmable DNA methylation, these tools
are frequently poorly tolerated and/or lowly expressed in mammalian
cell types. Further, the use of dCas-DNMTs has largely been restricted
to cell lines, which limits mechanistic insights in karyotypically
normal contexts and hampers translational utility in the longer term.
Here, we extend previous insights into the rational design of the
catalytic core of the mammalian DNMT3A methyltransferase and test
three dCas9-DNMT3A/3L variants across different human cell lines and
in primary donor-derived human T cells. We find that mutations within
the catalytic core of DNMT3A stabilize the expression of dCas9-DNMT3A/3L
fusion proteins in Jurkat T cells without sacrificing DNA methylation
or gene-silencing performance. We also show that these rationally
engineered mutations in DNMT3A alter DNA methylation profiles at loci
targeted with dCas9-DNMT3A/3L in cell lines and donor-derived human
T cells. Finally, we leverage the transcriptionally repressive effects
of dCas9-DNMT3A/3L variants to functionally link the expression of
a key immunomodulatory transcription factor to cytokine secretion
in donor-derived T cells. Overall, our work expands the synthetic
biology toolkit for epigenetic editing and provides a roadmap for
the use of engineered dCas-based DNMTs in primary mammalian cell types.