Harvard’s Wyss Institute partners with Cellectis to recode the human genome

May 4, 2018  Source: immunotherapies 652


Today the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and Cellectis (Euronext Growth: ALCLS – Nasdaq: CLLS), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on developing immunotherapies based on gene-edited allogeneic CAR T-cells (UCART), announced that they will collaborate to further advance the Wyss Institute’s efforts to recode the entire genome of cell lines derived from humans and other species, and to develop new tools and methods facilitating this goal. The cell lines would be engineered to resist debilitating viral infections while carrying out their normal functions, or even perform entirely new functions.

The Wyss Institute partners up with Cellectis to launch a new stage of the Recode project. Shown in this image is Eriona Hysolli, Ph.D., who is working with George Church, Ph.D., at the institute to recode protein coding sequences in the human genome using Cellectis’ TALEN® technology. Credit: Wyss Institute at Harvard University
The Recode project lays the technical foundation to extensively and functionally modify existing genomes in cells and whole organisms, and aims to convert them into research tools as well as clinical and biotechnological products.

The collaboration was announced at the May 1 Genome Project-write 2018 Scientific Working Meeting, conducted by the Center of Excellence for Engineering Biology, as part of the first grand-scale, community-wide GP-write project to develop such ultra-safe cells.

Previously, the research group led by George Church, Core Faculty member at the Wyss Institute, Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and of Health Sciences and Technology at Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), published on efforts to radically recode the bacterium E. coli’s genome. The researchers reduced the number of codons – the sequence units in the DNA that encode the amino acids the bacterium’s proteins are composed of – from 64 to 63. This caused the recoded bacteria to become resistant to most viruses and to be ‘biocontained’ in their intended laboratory environments since their survival can be linked to chemicals not found in the wild.

Building on these accomplishments, Church said, “the Recode project aims to create ultra-safe human cells that are resistant to infection with all viruses and prions. These cells and the technologies we are developing along the way will enable more effective ways to manufacture protein therapeutics, vaccines, cell therapies and transplantable organs.”

Under the collaboration with Cellectis, Church and his team will be given access to the company’s TALEN® gene editing technology. TALENs, short for transcription activator-like effector nucleases, are genome engineering enzymes that can introduce changes into the DNA code with high specificity and across an entire genome, and they can be multiplexed to make multiple changes at a time. “In the Recode project, our capabilities to edit genomes and invent new tools for high-level multiplexing of these efforts perfectly align with Cellectis’ expertise and strengths. Cellectis’ TALEN gene editing technology will contribute much to the success of this project,” said Church.

All protein-coding DNA sequences in a cell’s genome consist of triplet codons containing three of the four basic nucleotide bases known in shorthand as A, T, G and C. In addition, the beginning of a protein-coding DNA sequence is signaled by a START codon and its end with a STOP codon to enable the appropriate translation of DNA into the proteins’ amino acid sequences. As most amino acids are redundantly encoded by two to six different codons, Church and his team seek to compress the codon usage for specific amino acids from six down to four codons.

To achieve this, the team will deploy sequence-tailored TALEN® enzymes to help modify codons at 400,000 locations across the protein-coding regions of the human genome. The lab can then delete the genes encoding the RNA molecules known as transfer RNAs that the cells previously required during their protein synthesis to add amino acids corresponding to the eliminated codons.

“We are looking forward to collaborating with the Wyss Institute and George Church’s group on this very exciting Recode project using Cellectis’ technology to recode the entire genome of human and other species cell lines,” said Dr. André Choulika, Chief Executive Officer of Cellectis. “The precision, the performance and the flexibility of TALEN® technology makes it the optimal gene editing platform for such a cutting-edge project.”

This simplification of the protein-encoding portion of the genome may prevent viruses, which need the full repertoire of codons to produce their own proteins, from hijacking the host cells’ protein-synthesizing machinery. It may also allow researchers to re-purpose eliminated amino acid codons for the incorporation of nonstandard synthetic amino acids that can enable new protein functions and provide a reliable means of containing recoded cell lines in laboratory or industrial environments.

“The Recode project and partnership between synthetic biologists at the Wyss Institute and Cellectis represents a major new application area for genome engineering that could open up entirely new paths for prevention of infectious disease, as well as for biomanufacturing, organ transplantation, and regenerative medicine,” said Wyss Institute Founding Director Donald Ingber, M.D., Ph.D., who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at HMS and the Vascular Biology Program at Boston Children’s Hospital, as well as Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences.

By Ddu
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