Base editing could cure a host of genetic diseases

It’s already treating everything from deafness to ALS in animals. Are humans next?
Sign up for the Freethink Weekly newsletter!
A collection of our favorite stories straight to your inbox

Picture the familiar double helix of human DNA — a long, twisted ladder with 3 billion rungs on it, each made of a pair of genetic bases (A, T, C, and G).

A mistake in just one base along that ladder — an A where there should be a G — can be enough to cause a disease.

In fact, researchers have linked over 31,000 different mistakes, known as “point mutations,” to human diseases. Now, an advanced form of gene therapy — called base editing — could make it possible to safely correct them.

What Is Base Editing?

Base editing is a type of gene editing technology, just like CRISPR.

However, while CRISPR cuts through both strands of the DNA ladder to swap in different genes, a base editor makes precise changes to individual letters along the genome — a much less invasive kind of DNA surgery.

“It’s like your spell-checker,” neuroscientist Jeffrey Holt said in June. “If you type the wrong letter, spell checker fixes it for you.”

Base editing was first developed by Broad Institute researcher David Liu in 2016, and it’s not perfect — the best base editors still make off-target edits and aren’t 100% efficient.

However, the technique is more efficient than CRISPR and causes fewer errors, which has made it the focus of considerable research into correcting disease-causing point mutations.

Holt was part of a team that used base editing to partially restore the hearing of mice with a point mutation that causes deafness in people. Earlier in 2020, University of Illinois researchers used base editing to slow the progression of ALS in mice.

Base editing is like your spell-checker. If you type the wrong letter, it fixes it for you.


Jeffrey Holt

More recently, Liu was part of a group that used base editing to correct the point mutation that causes progeria, a premature-aging syndrome, in mice. By changing a T to a C in a single gene, they were able to more than double the lifespan of mice with the disease.

There’s no guarantee that a therapy that works in mice will translate to humans (although gene editing is conceptually much simpler than drugs that rely on complex chemistry).

To find out whether base editing can live up to its promise as a disease-curing technology, we need human studies — and now, one is just on the horizon.

Point Mutation Taken

On January 12, Massachusetts-based biotech company Verve Therapeutics announced the promising results of a study testing a base editing treatment for heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HeFH), a genetic heart disease.

HeFH is fairly common, affecting about one in 500 people, and it causes consistently high levels of “bad” cholesterol (LDL-C) — that makes people with the disease susceptible to heart attacks or strokes at a relatively young age.

In primates with HeFH, Verve used base editing to change an A to a G in a single gene. Within two weeks, the animals’ blood LDL-C levels had dropped by 59%. Six months later, they were still just as low.

VERVE-101 will look to be a genetic medicine for a genetic disease.


Sekar Kathiresan

The treatment, dubbed “VERVE-101,” was well-tolerated, with no adverse effects reported.

“When we started, we had no idea this would work,” Verve CEO Sekar Kathiresan said in a press release, adding, “It works, and we expect this to be durable for the lifetime of the animals.”

Now, Verve wants to find out if VERVE-101 works in humans.

The company plans to spend 2021 conducting toxicology studies in animals, with the goal of launching a clinical trial of the base editing treatment in 2022.

“VERVE-101 will look to be a definitive therapy for (people with HeFH),” Kathiresan said. “A one-and-done permanent lowering of cholesterol, or a genetic medicine for a genetic disease.”

We’d love to hear from you! If you have a comment about this article or if you have a tip for a future Freethink story, please email us at [email protected].

Sign up for the Freethink Weekly newsletter!
A collection of our favorite stories straight to your inbox
Related
This $400 genetic test could save your life
Nucleus Genomics’ new whole genome sequencing and analysis service promises to reveal the secrets hidden in your DNA.
Boosted Breeding and beyond: 3 tech trends that could end world hunger
A world without hunger is possible, and the development and deployment of new farming technologies could be one key to manifesting it.
New AI generates CRISPR proteins unlike any seen in nature
An AI that generates CRISPR proteins is opening the door to gene editors with capabilities beyond what we’ve found in nature.
New study challenges long-held assumption about cancer
Genetic mutations may not be necessary for cancer to develop, challenging a long-held assumption about the disease.
How turning off one gene causes mice to grow 6 legs
A study of embryo development in mice led to the creation of a mutant mouse fetus with an extra pair of legs in place of genitals.
Up Next
gene drive mosquito
Subscribe to Freethink for more great stories