CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9)-mediated genome editing provides a promising cure for HIV-1/AIDS; however, gene delivery efficiency in vivo remains an obstacle to overcome. Here, we demonstrate the feasibility and efficiency of excising the HIV-1 provirus in three different animal models using an all-in-one adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector to deliver multiplex single-guide RNAs (sgRNAs) plus Staphylococcus aureus Cas9 (saCas9). The quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 vector outperformed the duplex vector in excising the integrated HIV-1 genome in cultured neural stem/progenitor cells from HIV-1 Tg26 transgenic mice. Intravenously injected quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 excised HIV-1 proviral DNA and significantly reduced viral RNA expression in several organs/tissues of Tg26 mice. In EcoHIV acutely infected mice, intravenously injected quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 reduced systemic EcoHIV infection, as determined by live bioluminescence imaging. Additionally, this quadruplex vector induced efficient proviral excision, as determined by PCR genotyping in the liver, lungs, brain, and spleen. Finally, in humanized bone marrow/liver/thymus (BLT) mice with chronic HIV-1 infection, successful proviral excision was detected by PCR genotyping in the spleen, lungs, heart, colon, and brain after a single intravenous injection of quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8. In conclusion, in vivo excision of HIV-1 proviral DNA by sgRNAs/saCas9 in solid tissues/organs can be achieved via AAV delivery, a significant step toward human clinical trials.

Currently, combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) has been widely used to suppress active HIV-1 replication; however, a permanent cure is still lacking due to the existence of latent reservoirs, in which HIV proviral DNA integrates in the host genome. Upon cART cessation, the HIV viral load rebounds to cause a catastrophic resurgence of HIV/AIDS. Thus, several promising and novel strategies are being developed to achieve a permanent or “sterile” cure for HIV/AIDS. The versatile Cas9/single-guide RNA (sgRNA) technology is one strategy employed to eradicate the integrated proviral DNA in HIV-1 latent reservoirs and prevents HIV-1 (re)infection. For example, the spCas9 system has been successfully used to disrupt HIV-1 entry co-receptors CCR5 and CXCR4, along with several proviral structural proteins.We reported that stable transfection of cultured human cells with plasmids encoding spCas9 and HIV-1 sgRNAs targeting four different sites of the HIV-1 long terminal repeat (LTR) could successfully excise HIV-1 proviral DNA.Pre-treatment of cells with spCas9/LTR sgRNAs renders them resistant to new HIV-1 infection in vitro,which was also observed by others.We further demonstrated the feasibility and efficiency of HIV-1 excision by applying the spCas9/sgRNA system via lentivirus-mediated delivery to HIV-1-infected primary CD4T cells from human healthy subjects and patients with HIV-1.Finally, we demonstrated that a combination of sgRNAs targeting LTRs and the viral structural genes in the spCas9 system provides a more efficient means of HIV-1 excision in cultured cells.Using high-coverage whole-genome sequencing and cell-based functional assays, we demonstrated the absence of off-target effects when the multiplex sgRNAs/spCas9 system was used.Due to the limitations of spCas9 for AAV gene delivery in the clinical setting, we adapted the saCas9/sgRNA system in an all-in-one AAV vector for HIV excision in a recent report. We demonstrated the proof of concept that AAV9-mediated saCas9/duplex sgRNAs can be used to excise the integrated HIV-1 genome in HIV-1 transgenic mice and rats.In this study, we further tested the feasibility and efficiency of HIV-1 excision by saCas9/sgRNA-mediated genome editing in humanized bone marrow/liver/thymus (BLT) mice inoculated with HIV-1 via the vaginal mucosa or intraperitoneal (i.p.) transmission. The same genome editing system was also introduced in conventional mice during an acute infection of EcoHIVto demonstrate its ability to block active HIV-1 replication.

Use of the CRISPR/Cas9 system as an intracellular defense against HIV-1 infection in human cells.

The CRISPR-associated protein 9 (Cas9) is an RNA-guided endonuclease originally discovered as an integral mediator of bacterial adaptive immunity. The Cas9-mediated genome editing system generates site-specific double-strand DNA breaks (DSBs) that remarkably increase homologous recombination efficacy and thus render easy, fast, and economical manipulation of the genome in various cells and organs. In the past 4 years, Cas9 technology has been extensively utilized in basic science and pre-clinical settings for the potential treatment of genetic diseases, cancer, and infectious diseases. The majority of these applications are attributed to the successful development of the Streptococcus pyogenes Cas9 (spCas9), a 1,368-amino acid (aa) protein that recognizes a protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) of NRG nucleotides to the 3′ target site.However, several smaller Cas9 proteins from other bacterial species have been garnering more attention for their greater feasibility in viral gene therapy, specifically from Streptococcus thermophiles, Neisseria meningitides, and Staphylococcus aureus (saCas9). The efficiency and specificity of saCas9 (1,053 aa) in mammalian cells was characterized recently.The smaller size renders adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene delivery systems more feasible in clinical trials.The AAV-saCas9 system has been successfully tested in gene knockoutand knock-instudies in experimental animals.

Conventional PCR (35 cycles) using primer pair T361/T458 (for amplifying 5′-LTR/Gag) was used to detect the presence of HIV proviral DNA, which showed a weak wild-type band (1.4 kb) in the lung tissue of the B6M3 negative control without saCas9/sgRNA treatment (C). Nested PCR (35 cycles) using primer pair T361/T946 (for 5′-LTR/Gag) with the template from the first-round PCR (22 cycles with the primer pair T361/T458) identified the wild-type DNA fragment (1.13 kb) of HIV-1 proviral DNA in most, if not all, organs/tissues of each BLT mouse (A–F) and the PCR product of fragmental deletions resulted from HIV-1 excision in the heart, colon, and vagina of HIV-infected BLT mice treated with saCas9/sgRNA (A). Nested PCR with the primer pair T758/T363 (for Gag/3′-LTR) using the template from the first-round PCR (25 cycles, T758/T425) identified the fragmental deletion bands in organs/tissues of saCas9/sgRNA-treated BLT mice (A, B, D, and E) but not the untreated BLT mice (C and F). The fragmental deletion bands resulted from saCas9 editing were framed with dotted boxes followed by TA cloning and Sanger sequencing for validation (see Figures S10 and S11 ). The positive control represents the excision of the EcoHIV-eLuc reporter in HEK293T cells transfected with AAV-saCas9/sgRNA (LTR-1 plus GagD) vector. BxMx, box and mouse number.

Excision of HIV Proviral DNA by Quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 in Humanized BLT Mice Inoculated with HIV NL-BaL -eLuc at 2, 3, and 4 Weeks after AAV Treatment

Figure 7 Excision of HIV Proviral DNA by Quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 in Humanized BLT Mice Inoculated with HIV NL-BaL -eLuc at 2, 3, and 4 Weeks after AAV Treatment

To demonstrate the feasibility of saCas9/sgRNA genome editing on excising the HIV-1 provirus in a more clinically relevant animal model, we administered AAV-DJ/8 carrying sgRNAs/saCas9 into humanized BLT mice inoculated with a R5-, M-tropic HIV-eLuc reporter virus via vaginal mucosal transmission (n = 3; mouse identification [ID] nos. B5M2, B5M3, and B6M3) or intraperitoneal injection (n = 3; mouse ID nos. B7M2, B7M4, and B10M4). Whole-body BLI (unpublished data) with a sensitivity of visualizing five single cells in a niche was used to longitudinally visualize and analyze the spatiotemporal dynamics of HIV-1 dissemination in these BLT mice.These BLT mice showed a certain degree of either local or systemic HIV dissemination, but the infection diminished and completely ceased after the first 60 days without any visible infection determined by whole-body BLI examination in the following 70 days or longer. This phenomenon could possibly be attributed to T-cell depletion, HIV-1 latency, or the possible silencing of eLuc reporter by mutations during HIV-1 replication. Since no HIV-1 genome was detected by nested PCR in some of the tissues ( Figure 7 ), the contribution of mutation to the silenced reporter expression is less likely, which is further confirmed by our observation in another ongoing study that BLT mice showed successful systemic infection and latency under cART (unpublished data). The quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 was administered via both intravenous and intravaginal routes in HIV-infected BLT mice B5M2 and B5M3, but not B6M3, which served as the negative control. A single intravenous injection of AAV-DJ/8 was administered to HIV-infected BLT mice B7M2 and B7M4, but not B10M4, which served as the negative control. At 2–4 weeks after AAV delivery, BLT mice were euthanized and genomic DNA samples were extracted from major organs/tissues for PCR genotyping as described above. The presence of HIV-1 proviral DNA in the harvested organs/tissues was validated with nested PCR using the 5′-LTR/Gag primer pairs (T361/T458 then T361/T946) ( Figure 7 ). Importantly, we detected the fragmental deletion with both the 5′-LTR/Gag primer pair T361/T946 and the Gag/3′-LTR primer pair T758/T363 ( Figures 7 A, 7B, 7D, and 7E) in the vagina, heart, lungs, right eye (AAV injection site), colon, and human thymic organoid under the left kidney capsule. In particular, we observed a much higher intensity of the band representing a fragmental deletion, while the band representing the uncut proviral DNA was barely visible in the same tissue (e.g., the heart and colon of the B5M3 mouse) ( Figure 7 B). This result clearly suggests an efficient excision of HIV-1 proviral DNA in latently infected human cells within a solid tissue via a single i.v. injection of quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8. TA cloning of these PCR products and Sanger sequencing validated the fragmental deletions ( Figure S10 for PCR products from 5′-nested PCR using primer pair T361/T946; Figure S11 for PCR products from 3′-nested PCR using primer pair T758/T363). Within the cleaved residual sequence at both the 5′-LTR/Gag region ( Figure S10 ) and the Gag/3′-LTR region ( Figure S11 ), various degrees of insertion or deletion were observed between the predicted cleaving sites at the third nucleotide from PAM of the targeting sgRNAs ( Figures S10 A and S1 1A). These sets of pre-clinical data demonstrate the proof of principle that quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 can be delivered by AAV-DJ/8 into resident HIV-1 latently infected human cells in major tissues and organs in a humanized mouse model to excise integrated HIV-1 proviral DNA.

(A–C) Various extents of gene transduction in indicated tissues/organs for saCas9 (A), GagD (B), and LTR-1 (C) at 19 days after infection with quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 (upper panel) or empty control AAV-Cre-DJ/8 (lower panel). (D–F) Conventional PCR genotyping showing various extents of EcoHIV DNA excision between GagD and the 3′-LTR in each indicated tissue/organ (upper panel) compared with the negative control (lower panel). (G–I) qPCR analysis of three indicated fragmental excision types in different tissues/organs selected from B1M1 (G), B1M2 (H) and B1M3 (I). Data represent the mean ± SD of triplicate reactions and are expressed as relative levels over the internal uncut (non-targeting) region of EcoHIV DNA in the same tissues/organs. BxMx, box and mouse number.

PCR Genotyping and qPCR Analysis Validated the Gene Transduction and Excision Efficiency of EcoHIV-eLuc by Quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 in Various Organs/Tissues of Mice

Figure 6 PCR Genotyping and qPCR Analysis Validated the Gene Transduction and Excision Efficiency of EcoHIV-eLuc by Quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 in Various Organs/Tissues of Mice

To validate the in vivo excision efficiency, we performed PCR genotyping using the established above-mentioned PCR conditions at the endpoint of experiments. The efficient transduction of saCas9, GagD, and LTR-1 transgenes by AAV-DJ/8 was detected mainly in the liver, while it varied slightly in other organs and tissues ( Figures 6 A–6C). Using conventional PCR, we observed an efficient and robust excision of the predicted fragment in most tissues/organs, with the highest efficacy observed in the injected right eye area, heart, blood, liver, spleen, and lymph nodes ( Figures 6 D–6F). The variability in edited tissues from different animals may result from the random cellular/tissue distribution of EcoHIV-eLuc infection, AAV-mediated gene delivery, and Cas9-mediated excision. Again, some of the fragmental deletions were validated by TA cloning and Sanger sequencing ( Figure S8 ). To quantify the excision efficiency of quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 in vivo, we performed qPCR analysis of the excised fragments using three different primer combinations ( Figure S9 ). The melting peak curve analysis clearly identified three types of proviral DNA excisions as designed: 5′-LTR-1 to GagD, GagD to 3′-LTR-1, or GagD to 3′-LTR-3. Using the uncut (non-targeting) region (the sequence flanking both target sites) as internal normalization, we assessed the excision efficiency in selected tissues/organs ( Figures 6 G–6I). Although the individual number may underestimate the efficiency due to various combinations of excision, the results clearly showed that the excision efficiency ( Figures 6 G–6I) was consistent with PCR genotyping ( Figures 6 D–6F). The excision types and efficiency varied with different organs/tissues ( Figures 6 G–6I). Interestingly, all three types of excision occurred with 96% efficiency for the GagD/3′-LTR in the B1M3 mouse liver ( Figure 6 I). These data suggest that the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 is highly effective at excising the HIV proviral genome even in newly infected cells during in vivo systematic HIV infection.

(A) AAV-DJ/8 was administered via a retro-orbital injection into the blood sinus of the right eye of each mouse (n = 3) right after EcoHIV-eLuc inoculation via the same injection route. Representative bioluminescence imaging of one mouse on days 6, 9, 12, and 19 post-EcoHIV inoculation is shown. All of the images were measured for radiance (photon/second/Sr2) and pseudocolored with the same rainbow scale for fair comparison. (B) Total flux of bioluminescence (total photons/second, P/S) measured from the entire body of each group (n = 3/group until day 19 [n = 2]) on each indicated day post-EcoHIV-eLuc inoculation. (C) Bioluminescence output from EcoHIV-eLuc-infected cells in each mouse was measured from the ROI defined on the right eye for comparison. Data represent the mean ± SD, with statistical significance indicated by an asterisk in each comparison (p < 0.05, Student’s one-sided t test). (D) The bioluminescence output from the neck lymph node of each mouse (n = 3 until day 19 [n = 2]) was used for comparison of the efficacy of saCas9/gRNA treatment longitudinally on HIV excision (p values are two-sided using a linear mixed-effects model).

A transgenic mouse model, such as the aforementioned Tg26 mouse, can be used to test our saCas9 system on HIV proviral excision but does not recapitulate clinical HIV infection/latency in terms of HIV-1 proviral copies/loci, random integration, various infected cell types, and the high rate of HIV mutation. To further test the feasibility and efficiency of HIV-1 excision by our approach using AAV-sgRNA/saCas9 after systemic HIV-1 infection, we utilized an EcoHIV-eLuc reporter virus to infect a conventional NCr strain of nude mice.Right after EcoHIV-eLuc inoculation (total 250 ng HIV p24/mouse, n = 3) via retro-orbital injection in the right eye, a single dose of AAV-DJ/8 (3.07 × 10GC/mouse) was injected into the same mice via the same injection route immediately after EcoHIV inoculation. Another three NCr mice were injected with only EcoHIV-eLuc of the same dosage as a negative control group. We performed longitudinal bioluminescence imaging (BLI) of the live animals over 19 days after EcoHIV-eLuc inoculation ( Figure 5 A). We observed a significant reduction in EcoHIV-eLuc reporter activity on both days 9 and 19 from the entire mouse or the right eye area ( Figures 5 B and 5C). Compared with the negative control group, the reduction in EcoHIV-eLuc infection by AAV-sgRNAs/saCas9 treatment was statistically significant, as measured by the bioluminescence output from the neck lymph node at the dorsal (p < 0.011) and ventral (p < 0.014) sides during the entire course of the experiment (19 days) using a linear mixed-effects model for statistical significance ( Figure 5 D).

Whole-genome sequencing and off-target analysis in our previous studiesand other reportsdid not detect any apparent off-target effects of spCas9 with multiplex sgRNAs in cultured primary cells or cell lines. To examine any potential in vivo off-target effects in this study, we performed a T7E1 assay using genomic DNA from the tissues/organs of Tg26 mice treated with quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9. Based on potential off-target sites predicted by bioinformatics analysis as we previously described,we selected two to three predicted sites for each sgRNA target (LTR-1, LTR-3, and GagD) with the highest score of specificity and we performed high-fidelity PCR generating a 500- to 800-bp product for T7E1 evaluation. As shown in Figure S7 , no mutations were found in seven predicted off-target sites within the mouse genome but a clear mutation was detected in the on-target PCR product.

(A and B) Tg26 mice were injected via the tail vein with purified AAV-DJ/8 virus (1.535 × 10GC/mouse). Two weeks after injection, mice were euthanized and their tissues were collected for genomic DNA extraction and PCR genotyping. The positive control represented excision of the EcoHIV-eLuc reporter in HEK293T cells transfected with AAV-saCas9/sgRNA (LTR-1 plus GagD) vector. The negative control represented the mice injected with mock AAV virus. (C) An additional injection of AAV-DJ/8 was given at 2 weeks after the first injection and tissue samples were harvested 2 weeks later for PCR genotyping with the indicated primers. The representative deletion fragments, indicated by the dotted boxes in (B), were verified with TA cloning and Sanger sequencing (see Figure S6 ). (D) Diagram showing the location of RT-qPCR primer pairs for HIV transcripts. (E–G) RT-qPCR analysis showing a robust decrease (p < 0.001) in the levels of HIV-1 RNA transcripts in sgRNAs/saCas9-treated mice as compared with the control mice injected with mock AAV virus. Data represent the mean ± SD of triplicate experiments after normalization with housekeeping gene Ppia.

To expand the tissue ranges and potential cell types of HIV-1 excision in Tg26 transgenic mice, we packaged the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 all-in-one vector into AAV-DJ/8, which increases gene delivery efficiency in other tissues/organs rather than the liver.To maximize the in vivo transduction efficiency, we purified and concentrated the AAV-DJ/8 virus using large-scale preparation.Packaging efficiency for the oversized quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 reached 3.07 × 10GC/mL, which was close to the titer of a control AAV-Cre vector (4.21 × 10GC/mL) that was prepared at the same time. One intravenous (i.v.) injection of the purified quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ/8 (1.5 × 10GC/mouse) resulted in efficient transduction of the saCas9 transgene in most organs/tissues collected ( Figure S4 A). The expression of saCas9 mRNA and protein in transduced organs/tissues was validated by RT-qPCR with primers targeting saCas9 and immunohistochemistry with an anti-HA antibody ( Figure S5 A). For the 5′-LTR/Gag primer pair, we observed visible fragmental deletions of the designed size using conventional PCR conditions ( Figure 4 A). Using the Gag/3′-LTR primer pair, we observed the fragmental deletion in liver, lung, and brain tissues under conventional PCR conditions ( Figure 4 B). TA cloning and Sanger sequencing validated the fragmental deletion of the designed size in both the brain and liver ( Figure S6 ). One additional infection (1.5 × 10GC/mouse) 2 weeks after the first injection expanded the range of transduced tissues/organs and increased the gene transduction efficiency of saCas9 and sgRNAs 4 weeks after the first injection ( Figures S4 B and S5 B). The excision efficiency as shown by the fragmental deletion with the Gag/3′-LTR primer pair for PCR genotyping was also increased in the liver and lungs and expanded to other organs such as the kidney and spleen ( Figure 4 C). RT-qPCR analysis revealed a significant reduction in mRNA expression of structural viral proteins Gag and Env in the brain, kidneys, liver, and lungs ( Figures 4 D–4F) as well as the regulatory protein Tat in the brain and kidneys ( Figures 4 G and S4 C). This is supported by our other studies in HIV-1 transgenic mice and rats.Taken together, both AAV-DJ and AAV-DJ/8 viruses harboring either duplex or quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 achieved sufficient gene delivery in vivo and subsequent excision of the integrated HIV-1 genome in various organs/tissues of Tg26 transgenic mice.

In vitro and in vivo gene therapy vector evolution via multispecies interbreeding and retargeting of adeno-associated viruses.

To test whether the Cas9/sgRNA system is capable of excising integrated HIV-1 proviral DNA in vivo, we selected the AAV-DJ serotype for in vivo gene delivery.As shown in Figure S3 A, one single dose of AAV-DJ virus (4.15–4.20 × 10GC) via tail-vein injection could efficiently deliver sgRNAs- and saCas9-expressing cDNA into the liver and spleen in the first week alone. Histopathological and immunohistochemical examination of the liver did not identify any AAV-related tissue toxicity. The observed high transduction efficiency and minimal tissue toxicity is consistent with a previous report using similar dosages in adult mice.One additional injection of the same dose at 1 week after the first injection did show a consistent pattern of transgene distribution ( Figure S3 B). The AAV-DJ carrying duplex or quadruplex sgRNAs along with saCas9 results in similar gene delivery efficiencies in several organs ( Figures S3 A and S3B), even though the insertion of quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 appears to be beyond the limits of AAV packaging capacity. To determine the efficacy of sgRNAs/saCas9 in cleaving the integrated HIV-1 genome in animal tissues/organs, PCR genotyping was performed with a pair of primers that can amplify the fragmental deletion and ascertain the excision event.For the 5′-LTR/Gag deletion, we did not observe any fragmental deletions 1 week after infection by using nested PCR amplification, which is likely due to a low expression level of saCas9 in the first week after in vivo AAV delivery (data not shown). However, after conducting the optimization of the nested PCR analysis using the indicated primer pairs ( Figure S3 C), we observed the fragmental deletion to various extents in most organs/tissues, particularly in the liver, bone marrow, and spleen ( Figure S3 D). The additional AAV injection at 7 days after the first infection did increase the cleaving efficiency in most organs/tissues ( Figure S3 D). Because there are more than 10 copies of the HIV-1 transgene in a single tandem repeat in Tg26 mice,the size of the fragmental deletion, which is based on where the excision occurs in the tandem repeat, varied; some were larger than predicted, implying potential differences in DNA repairing events between tissues/organs. These fragmental deletions were verified by TA cloning of representative bands and Sanger sequencing ( Figure S3 E). Again, both duplex and quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ induced a similar pattern of fragmental deletion mainly in the liver, while other organs showed a variable pattern of fragmental deletions ( Figure S3 D).

In vitro and in vivo gene therapy vector evolution via multispecies interbreeding and retargeting of adeno-associated viruses.

(A–C) Similar infection efficiency of monoplex (A), duplex (B), and quadruplex (C) in NSCs at 20 days post-infection with a fMOI of 10. The infected cells were determined by immunofluorescence cytochemistry with anti-HA tag antibody. (D–F) Direct PCR analysis validated the efficient delivery of transgene saCas9 (D) and LTR-1/GagD (E) and excision of 5′-LTR/GagD and GagD/3′-LTR (F) at 2 days post-infection. Relative fold changes or excision efficiency (%) were calculated via densitometry. (G) Quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 showed stronger cleavage efficacy than the duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 at 20 days post-infection with an fMOI of 10. The primers T361/T458 detected the deletions between 5′-LTR-1/LTR-3 and GagD, and the primers T758/T645 detected the deletions between GagD and 3′-LTR-1/LTR-3 (F and G). GAPDH was used for normalization of genomic DNA. Control-882 AAV-DJ virus was used as a nonfunctional control. GAPDH, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase; NSC, neural stem cell.

The HIV-1 Tg26 transgenic mouse was previously generated to contain a loci integrated with more than 10 copies of the pNL4-3 proviral genome with a 3.1-kb deletion spanning the partial Gag and Pol genes to render virus replication incompetent.These Tg26 mice develop a well-characterized kidney disease associated with HIV-1 viral gene expressionand potential uncharacterized neurological and cardiovascular deficits.Before in vivo studies, we evaluated the HIV-1 excision efficiency of multiplex sgRNAs/saCas9 using neural stem cells (NSCs)/neural progenitor cells (NPCs) isolated from Tg26 transgenic mice. The rationale for using NSCs/NPCs is the increasing evidence showing the potential HIV infection/latency in NSCs/NPCs,which may relate to HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HANDs). Immunocytochemistry with an anti-HA antibody in mouse NSCs/NPCs after sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ infection showed that the monoplex sgRNA/saCas9 AAV-DJ infected 92.3% of cells determined at 20 days post-inoculation with a functional MOI (fMOI) of 10, which equals 1.8 × 10genomic MOI (gMOI), suggesting that the AAV-DJ virus is highly effective at infecting NSCs/NPCs. Equal fMOIs of duplex (6.5 × 10gMOI) or quadruplex (2.1 × 10gMOI) sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ ( Figure S2 ) produced similar infection efficiencies of around 87.63% and 90.52%, respectively ( Figures 3 A–3C). Afterward, we determined the efficiency of both duplex and quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 in cleaving the integrated HIV-1 proviral DNA in cultured NSCs/NPCs. We first validated the dose-dependent delivery of saCas9 and sgRNAs by PCR analysis at 2 days after AAV-DJ infection ( Figures 3 D and 3E). Then, we evaluated the HIV-1 excision efficacy by PCR genotyping. Both duplex and quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 induced a dose-dependent deletion of the predicted DNA fragments at 2 days after AAV infection, while quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 induced a higher cleaving efficiency when an equal fMOI was used ( Figure 3 F). The cleavage efficiency was dramatically increased at 20 days post-infection ( Figure 3 G) because of the long-term AAV transduction leading to sustained expression of saCas9/sgRNAs and cumulative genome editing. Again, the quadruplex induced a higher efficiency of HIV-1 excision ( Figure 3 G) despite the similar infection efficiency ( Figures 3 B and 3C). These data suggest that AAV-mediated multiplex sgRNAs/saCas9 can effectively excise the integrated HIV-1 proviral genome in cultured NSCs/NPCs from HIV-1 Tg26 transgenic mice and the oversized quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV-DJ retains high efficiency of gene transduction and functional genome editing.

A new model for post-integration latency in macroglial cells to study HIV-1 reservoirs of the brain.

The successful packaging of monoplex and duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 into a single AAV vector was reported recently.The duplex sgRNAs/saCas9-expressing cassette (4.969 kb) almost reaches the packaging limit of AAV viruses (∼5.0–5.2 kb).However, genome sizes ranging from 5.2 to 8.9 kb have been reported for efficient AAV packaging and gene delivery both in vitro and in vivo.Therefore, we tested whether the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 expression cassettes (5.716 kb) can be packaged efficiently into an AAV virus. We selected the AAV-DJ serotype because it combines the features of eight native AAV serotypes (AAV-2, AAV-4, AAV-5, AAV-8, AAV-9, avian AAV, bovine AAV, and caprine AAV) for a higher transduction efficiency in a broader range of cells/tissues,escapes from antibody neutralization,and provides the highest liver transduction efficiency in vivo. Liver enrichment is integral for demonstrating the proof of concept that the HIV-1 provirus can be excised in vivo. For the duplex sgRNAs/saCas9, a viral titer of ∼4.15–4.3 × 10genomic copies (GC)/mL (unpurified crude lysate) was obtained as determined by PCR, with a functional titer of 4.4–9.7 × 10transduction units (TU)/mL, as determined by immunocytochemistry with an anti-hemagglutinin (HA) antibody that detects the HA-tagged saCas9 protein. For the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9, a similar genomic titer of 4.2 × 10GC/mL was obtained with a functional titer of 2.5 × 10TU/mL, which is 1.8- to 3.9-fold less than that from the duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 ( Figure S2 ). These data suggest that the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV can be successfully packaged into an AAV-DJ virus that can efficiently infect mammalian cells with functional expression of the saCas9 protein.

In vitro and in vivo gene therapy vector evolution via multispecies interbreeding and retargeting of adeno-associated viruses.

As demonstrated above and previously,two LTR sgRNAs are capable of excising the entire HIV-1 genome in addition to the fragmental deletion of both LTRs, and a combination of sgRNAs targeting to LTRs and structural protein resulted in higher proviral cleavage efficiency and easier PCR genotyping. To combine these two features for optimized efficiency, we selected a cocktail of LTR-1, LTR-3, GagD, and PolB sgRNAs and cloned their expression cassettes into an all-in-one saCas9 AAV vector using a novel interchangeable infusion cloning strategy. By transient transfection with equal amounts of the duplex or quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9-expressing single plasmid, we found that the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 plasmid was more effective at reducing EcoHIV-eLuc reporter activity ( Figure 2 C). This was validated by the PCR genotyping, which showed a stronger reduction of the wild-type band generated by PCR primers across the 5′-LTR and Gag ( Figures 2 D and 2E). The primers T361/T458 ( Figure 1 A) detected a fragmental deletion between 5′-LTR-1 and GagD and an additional insertion in the duplex group, while another fragmental deletion expected between 5′-LTR-3 and GagD was observed in the quadruplex group ( Figure 2 D). The primer pair T710/T458 ( Figure 1 A) detected the predicted fragment after deletion between the 5′-LTR-3 and GagD sites ( Figure 2 E). Further PCR genotyping analysis of the Gag/Pol and 3′-LTR regions showed that the quadruplex sgRNA system had greater potential for cleaving the entire HIV-1 genome. The primer T758/T363 detected the two deletions between GagD and 3′-LTR-1 or LTR-3 ( Figure 2 F), while T689/T363 detected the two deletions between PolB and LTR-1 or LTR-3 ( Figure 2 G). The primer T689/T711 detected one deletion as predicted ( Figure 2 H). Comparative analysis of the band intensity for the fragment deletions showed that LTR-1 and GagD were most effective, while LTR-3 was less efficient in the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 system ( Figures 2 D, 2F, and 2G). These cleaving patterns suggest that the quadruplex cocktail strategy is the most effective at excising HIV-1 entire genome due to multiplex fragmental deletions and multiple indel mutations around the target sequence.

(A and B) Duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 exhibited stronger inhibition of EcoHIV-eLuc activity (A) and excision of the HIV-1 genome (B). The excision efficiency (%) indicates the density of the fragmental deletion band over the total bands (B). (C–J) Quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 exhibited stronger inhibition of EcoHIV-eLuc activity (C) and higher excision efficiency at both 5′-LTR-1/LTR-3 with GagD (D and E) or GagD/PolB with 3′-LTR (F–J). The primer T361/T458 (D) detected fragmental deletions between 5′-LTR-1/LTR-3 and GagD (arrows) and an additional insertion was observed in both the duplex and quadruplex groups (arrowhead). T710/T458 detected the deletion between 5′-LTR-3 and GagD (E). Deletions between GagD or PolB and 3′-LTR-1/LTR-3 were detected by the primer T758/T363 (F) and T689/T363 (G), respectively. The primer pair T689/T711 detected the deletion between PolB and 3′-LTR-1 (H). The genomic DNA was normalized with saCas9 and β-actin (J). HEK293T cells in a 96-well plate were co-transfected with the EcoHIV-eLuc reporter plus two individual monoplex sgRNA-expressing vectors (100 ng each), one duplex sgRNA-expressing vector (100 ng) with an empty pX601 vector (100 ng) to achieve an equal amount of DNA (200 ng, A and B), or one duplex/quadruplex sgRNA-expressing vector and the sgRNA control (100 ng each, C–J). After 48 hr, the ONE-Glo Luciferase Assay (A and C) was performed as described in Figure 1 , and direct PCR genotyping (B and D–J) was performed using the indicated primer pairs.

To ensure maximum efficiency of HIV-1 excision and suppression, we selected the pair of LTR-1 and GagD to compare the excision efficiency from co-transfection of two single sgRNA-expressing vectors versus transfection of one duplex sgRNA-expressing vector. The smaller size of saCas9 (3.159 kb) allows a single AAV vector to harbor two sgRNA-expressing cassettes and an saCas9-expressing cassette for efficient AAV packaging and gene delivery.Transfection of the duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 vector induced a further reduction of luciferase reporter activity as compared with the co-transfection of two separate single sgRNA/saCas9 vectors ( Figure 2 A). Cleavage of the reporter gene was confirmed by PCR genotyping, and the ratio of the cleaved fragmental band over the wild-type band exhibited the stronger cleaving capability of the duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 vector than the two separate sgRNA/saCas9 vectors ( Figure 2 B). The outperforming effect of the duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 may result from the co-expression of these three components in the same cells.

Using the spCas9/sgRNA system, we demonstrated easier PCR genotyping and more efficient HIV-1 excision through the combination of sgRNAs targeting the LTRs and the viral structural genes (e.g., Gag or Pol).To test whether this is also applicable to the saCas9/sgRNA system, we paired sgRNAs targeting Gag or Pol with one of the three LTR sgRNAs. All combinations of LTR-1 or LTR-3 with Gag or Pol sgRNAs induced a robust reduction of EcoHIV-eLuc activity in HEK293T cells ( Figure 1 D). The pairing of LTR-2 and GagD also induced a robust reduction, but pairing with GagB, GagC, and PolB exhibited lower excision efficiency in reducing the reporter activity ( Figure 1 D). Direct PCR genotyping with 5′-LTR or 3′-LTR primers paired with the structural primers validated the cleaving efficiency of all of the sgRNA combinations ( Figure 1 E). To further validate the fragmental deletion and provide a rationale for quadruplex sgRNAs (see below), we selected a combination of sgRNAs of LTR-1 and GagD for TA cloning and Sanger sequencing. The results showed the expected sequence of the fragment after deletion between the two target sites ( Figure S1 for LTR-1 plus GagD). These data suggest that all of the sgRNAs selected for the saCas9 system are highly efficient in making DSBs at their predicted target sites and that pairing the LTR sgRNAs with sgRNAs targeting viral structural regions induced varying degrees of functional excision.

(A) Location of sgRNA target sites and PCR primers (arrows). (B and C) Efficiency comparison between saCas9/sgRNA and the spCas9/sgRNA system using the EcoHIV-eLuc reporter assay (B) and direct PCR genotyping (C). The excision efficiency (%) indicates the density of the fragmental deletion band(s) over the total bands. Arrows point to the representative fragmental 296-bp deletion between LTR-1 and LTR-3 target sites at the third nucleotide from PAM and to an additional 180-bp insertion, which were validated by TA cloning and Sanger sequencing (C). (D and E) Three LTR sgRNAs paired with viral structural sgRNAs induced robust inhibition of EcoHIV-eLuc activity by the ONE-Glo Luciferase Assay (D) and fragmental deletion/insertion by direct PCR genotyping with the indicated primers (E). The representative fragmental deletion in the dotted box in (E) was corroborated with Sanger sequencing (see Figure S1 ). HEK293T cells in six wells of the 96-well plate were co-transfected with the pNL4-3-EcoHIV-eLuc reporter (10 ng/well), the pCMV-renilla-luciferase reporter (2 ng/well), and the indicated Cas9/sgRNA-expressing vectors as follows: for the spCas9 system (B), pLV-EF1a-spCas9-T2A-RFP (80 ng/well) and the indicated sgRNA expression vectors (60 ng/well each for paired gRNAs); for the saCas9 system (B and D), pX601-saCas9/LTR sgRNA expression vectors (100 ng/well each for indicted pairs). After 48 hr, eLuc activity in the cell lysates was measured with the ONE-Glo luciferase assay system and renilla-luciferase activity was measured with the Renilla-Luciferase Assay System. Data represent the mean ± SD of four independent transfections with percentage changes in eLuc after renilla-luciferase normalization as compared with the corresponding empty pX601 vector. Two additional wells of the transfected cells were used for direct PCR genotyping (C and E). Similar experiments were repeated two to three times.

To determine the excision efficiency of the saCas9 system, we selected three sgRNAs targeting the HIV LTR ( Figure 1 A) using the optimal PAM NNGRRNand we performed EcoHIV-enhanced firefly luciferase (eLuc) reporter assays and direct PCR genotyping as we described previously.We employed an sgRNA pairing approach because it is more reliable for identifying successful excision of the HIV-1 proviral genome by functional reporter assays and PCR genotyping.As shown in Figure 1 B, all combinations between the selected three LTR sgRNAs in the presence of saCas9 almost completely eliminated EcoHIV-eLuc activity (by 95%–99%). Since these identified seed (target) sequences were designed as NGGRRN that exactly match the spCas9 PAM (NGG), we cloned them into a lentiviral WG vector,in which spCas9-specific sgRNA sequence differs from the sgRNA sequence for saCas9 (except the seed sequence),and compared the HIV-1 excision efficiency between saCas9/sgRNA and spCas9/sgRNA. Side-by-side transfection and EcoHIV-eLuc reporter studies showed that the spCas9/sgRNA with these three pairing methods was less effective at reducing luciferase activity ( Figure 1 B) and excising EcoHIV DNA ( Figure 1 C). The higher excision efficiency of the saCas9/sgRNA system may be attributed to the higher co-expression level of sgRNA and saCas9 in the same cells because they are in a single vector. Additionally, the smaller size of saCas9 allows higher gene delivery efficiency, and the intrinsic nuclease activity of saCas9 may be more efficient at making DSBs than spCas9.The different sgRNA sequences used between the two different bacterial Cas9s may also contribute to saCas9’s better cleaving efficiency.

Discussion

51 Fuchs S.P.

Desrosiers R.C. Promise and problems associated with the use of recombinant AAV for the delivery of anti-HIV antibodies. 52 Brady J.M.

Baltimore D.

Balazs A.B. Antibody gene transfer with adeno-associated viral vectors as a method for HIV prevention. 53 Wang Z.

Pan Q.

Gendron P.

Zhu W.

Guo F.

Cen S.

Wainberg M.A.

Liang C. CRISPR/Cas9-derived mutations both inhibit HIV-1 replication and accelerate viral escape. , 54 Wang G.

Zhao N.

Berkhout B.

Das A.T. CRISPR-Cas9 can inhibit HIV-1 replication but NHEJ repair facilitates virus escape. 55 Bauer D.E.

Canver M.C.

Orkin S.H. Generation of genomic deletions in mammalian cell lines via CRISPR/Cas9. 16 Yin C.

Zhang T.

Li F.

Yang F.

Putatunda R.

Young W.B.

Khalili K.

Hu W.

Zhang Y. Functional screening of guide RNAs targeting the regulatory and structural HIV-1 viral genome for a cure of AIDS. To our knowledge, this study is the first to demonstrate the effective excision of HIV-1 proviral DNA from the host genome in pre-clinical animal models using saCas9 and multiplex sgRNAs delivered by an all-in-one AAV-DJ/8 vector. These AAV viruses induce effective gene delivery and HIV-1 excision in vitro as well as in vivo in HIV-1 Tg26 transgenic mice, EcoHIV-eLuc acutely infected mice, and HIV-1-infected humanized BLT mice. Based on the extensive and highly promising clinical application of AAVs in gene therapy (for review, see Fuchs and Desrosiersand Brady et al.), our study demonstrates the proof of principle for treating HIV-1/AIDS with the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing approach. Furthermore, the combination of easy/fast multiplex sgRNA cloning, rapid reporter screening, reliable direct PCR genotyping, and highly efficient AAV virus production provides potential for using saCas9/sgRNA genome editing in personalized and precision medicine. Using multiplex sgRNAs to target multiple HIV proviral DNA simultaneously is beneficial to prevent the potential escape of HIV due to the high mutation rate during HIV-1 replication because the probability of double mutations in two different target sequences in the same HIV proviral genome is much lower than that of single mutation in a target site. Finally, we demonstrate that the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 strategy combining sgRNAs targeting two LTR sites (at both the 5′ and 3′ ends) and two structural proteins (Gag and Pol) is a promising therapeutic candidate for HIV-1 excision, due to maximization of the possibility of multiple indel mutations on six on-target sites and fragmental deletions among these sites. This quadruplex strategy also provides additional advantages, including (1) its ability to greatly reduce the potential of HIV-1 escape,(2) the high possibility of HIV-1 excision despite the continuous proviral mutation in the clinical HIV-1 patient population, (3) reliable loss-of-function achievement due to removal of a substantial portion of the target gene or genome,and (4) optimal efficiency of excision.

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Wei W. High-throughput screens in mammalian cells using the CRISPR-Cas9 system. , 57 Kabadi A.M.

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Biasco L. Safety of gene therapy: new insights to a puzzling case. 3 Hastie E.

Samulski R.J. Adeno-associated virus at 50: a golden anniversary of discovery, research, and gene therapy success--a personal perspective. , 59 Mingozzi F.

High K.A. Immune responses to AAV vectors: overcoming barriers to successful gene therapy. 60 Moser R.J.

Hirsch M.L. AAV vectorization of DSB-mediated gene editing technologies. 4 Swiech L.

Heidenreich M.

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Li Y.

Trombetta J.

Sur M.

Zhang F. In vivo interrogation of gene function in the mammalian brain using CRISPR-Cas9. , 61 Platt R.J.

Chen S.

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Dahlman J.E.

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Jovanovic M.

et al. CRISPR-Cas9 knockin mice for genome editing and cancer modeling. , 62 Senís E.

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Große S.

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Niopek D.

Mueller A.K.

Börner K.

Grimm D. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome engineering: an adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector toolbox. , 63 Howes R.

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et al. AAV-mediated CRISPR/Cas gene editing of retinal cells in vivo. 65 Wright A.V.

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Doudna J.A. Rational design of a split-Cas9 enzyme complex. , 66 Zetsche B.

Volz S.E.

Zhang F. A split-Cas9 architecture for inducible genome editing and transcription modulation. 67 Nguyen D.P.

Miyaoka Y.

Gilbert L.A.

Mayerl S.J.

Lee B.H.

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Wells J.A. Ligand-binding domains of nuclear receptors facilitate tight control of split CRISPR activity. , 68 Nuñez J.K.

Harrington L.B.

Doudna J.A. Chemical and biophysical modulation of Cas9 for tunable genome engineering. 69 Fine E.J.

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Deshmukh H.

Kemp M.L.

Bao G. Trans-spliced Cas9 allows cleavage of HBB and CCR5 genes in human cells using compact expression cassettes. 2 Ran F.A.

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et al. In vivo genome editing using Staphylococcus aureus Cas9. , 4 Swiech L.

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Li Y.

Trombetta J.

Sur M.

Zhang F. In vivo interrogation of gene function in the mammalian brain using CRISPR-Cas9. , 5 Zuris J.A.

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Joung J.K.

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Liu D.R. Cationic lipid-mediated delivery of proteins enables efficient protein-based genome editing in vitro and in vivo. , 6 Yin H.

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Grompe M.

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Anderson D.G. Genome editing with Cas9 in adult mice corrects a disease mutation and phenotype. , 7 Yin H.

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et al. Therapeutic genome editing by combined viral and non-viral delivery of CRISPR system components in vivo. 17 Kaminski R.

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Yin C.

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Gordon J.

Hu W.

Khalili K. Excision of HIV-1 DNA by gene editing: a proof-of-concept in vivo study. In vivo genome editing efficiency relies mainly on effective gene delivery. Lentivirus-mediated Cas9/gRNA delivery has been preferentially and extensively employed in most laboratories;however, safety and immunogenicity concerns limit its clinical applications.AAV-mediated gene therapy is becoming a promising approach in clinical trials because it reduces the risks of mutagenesis, toxicity, and severe host immune response.The feasibility and efficiency of AAV-mediated Cas9 delivery has been tested extensively both in vitro and in vivo (for review, see Moser and Hirsch). Several laboratories using minimal promoters and poly(A) sequences have reported success in applying AAV-spCas9 in cultured cells and animal models.Splitting spCas9 into functional N-terminal and C-terminal partsprovides a new way to deliver spCas9 more efficiently in pre-clinical animal models.The AAV-split-spCas9 nickase vector using the GyrA intein system dramatically increases the specificity of genome editing.Among several smaller Cas9 orthologs, saCas9 has been well characterized and is highly promising for animal studies and clinical applications. The high efficiency of AAV packaging and gene transduction in animal models using saCas9 plus one or two sgRNA-expressing cassettes has been tested in an all-in-one AAV vector with various AAV serotypes.Here, we demonstrate that duplex HIV-sgRNAs with saCas9 in an all-in-one AAV-DJ vector are capable of delivering transgenes and excising the HIV-1 genome in cultured cells and particularly in various organs/tissues of Tg26 transgenic mice. This is supported by our recent study using duplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV9 in HIV-1 transgenic mice and rats.Furthermore, we demonstrate that the oversized all-in-one AAV vector encoding quadruplex sgRNAs and saCas9 is similarly capable of achieving high-titer packaging into the AAV-DJ/8 virus and inducing effective excision of the HIV-1 genome in vitro and in vivo.

70 Nissim L.

Perli S.D.

Fridkin A.

Perez-Pinera P.

Lu T.K. Multiplexed and programmable regulation of gene networks with an integrated RNA and CRISPR/Cas toolkit in human cells. , 71 Gao Y.

Zhao Y. Self-processing of ribozyme-flanked RNAs into guide RNAs in vitro and in vivo for CRISPR-mediated genome editing. 72 Sakuma T.

Nishikawa A.

Kume S.

Chayama K.

Yamamoto T. Multiplex genome engineering in human cells using all-in-one CRISPR/Cas9 vector system. 57 Kabadi A.M.

Ousterout D.G.

Hilton I.B.

Gersbach C.A. Multiplex CRISPR/Cas9-based genome engineering from a single lentiviral vector. 57 Kabadi A.M.

Ousterout D.G.

Hilton I.B.

Gersbach C.A. Multiplex CRISPR/Cas9-based genome engineering from a single lentiviral vector. Several approaches to place multiplex sgRNA-expressing cassettes in an all-in-one vector have been reported. Using the RNA processing property of the Csy4 protein or ribozymes, a single transcript under a Pol II promoter can be processed into multiple sgRNAs.Multiplex vectors with up to seven sgRNAs under the same U6 promoter have been successfully constructed using the Golden Gate cloning method, and their multiplex targeting efficiency has been tested for multiplex genome/epigenome editing and simultaneous activation/repression of multiple genes.Multiplex sgRNAs driven by four independent Pol III promoters (human U6 promoter, mouse U6 promoter, 7SK, and H1) have been also tested.Here we developed a novel In-Fusion (Clontech) cloning strategy with interrogated exchange of two restriction enzymes, rendering easy and fast cloning of any number of multiplex sgRNAs into a single vector. This approach is applicable to any multiplex sgRNA under any Pol III promoter and to various viral gene delivery systems. Although we showed that four sgRNAs under four identical U6 promoters exhibited sufficient activity to induce target DNA cleavage, we found that the sgRNA LTR-1, GagD, and PolB in the quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 system are best, while LTR-3 is weaker in cleaving HIV-1 provirus although it does show a high potency of cleavage in the duplex sgRNA system. Whether the location of each sgRNA among the multiplex sgRNA cascade affects sgRNA expression efficiency warrants further investigation. In addition, it would be interesting to optimize the combination of various sgRNA-driven promotersfor maximal AAV packaging and gene transduction.

6 resting T cells/BLT mouse × 9.9 infectious units per million cells) can be detected in each HIV-1-infected BLT mouse. 73 Denton P.W.

Olesen R.

Choudhary S.K.

Archin N.M.

Wahl A.

Swanson M.D.

Chateau M.

Nochi T.

Krisko J.F.

Spagnuolo R.A.

et al. Generation of HIV latency in humanized BLT mice. 50 Song J.

Cai Z.

White A.G.

Jin T.

Wang X.

Kadayakkara D.

Anderson C.J.

Ambrose Z.

Young W.B. Visualization and quantification of simian immunodeficiency virus-infected cells using non-invasive molecular imaging. + T cells and other latent cellular reservoirs in vivo. This study demonstrates the clear excision of Gag/3′-LTR and 5′-LTR/Gag fragments in latently infected human cells within mouse multiple organs/tissues by a single AAV-DJ/8 administration in HIV-infected humanized BLT mice. This finding also validates the vast extent of tissue reservoirs harboring HIV-1 viruses. However, further studies are needed to target latently infected T cells in order to eliminate viremia rebound after cART. This study established the feasibility of using quadruplex sgRNAs/saCas9 AAV gene therapy in excising the integrated HIV-1 provirus in both Tg26 transgenic mice and humanized BLT mice. sgRNAs/saCas9 can be considered as a pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) during EcoHIV inoculation in conventional mice. The intravenous administration of AAV-DJ or AAV-DJ/8 achieved extensive gene transduction and HIV-1 excision in most tissues/organs, with the highest in liver followed by the heart, lungs, spleen, vagina, colon, and lymph nodes. Using outgrowth assays, it was estimated that only ∼30 HIV-1 latently infected resting T cells (total 3 × 10resting T cells/BLT mouse × 9.9 infectious units per million cells) can be detected in each HIV-1-infected BLT mouse.Because of the difficulty in isolating HIV-infected resting T cells from the high density of solid lymph tissue or somatic organs of humanized BLT mice or EcoHIV-infected mice, we employed a novel in vivo imaging system as we previously describedto monitor suppressed HIV-1 expression longitudinally to establish a latency model, followed by PCR genotyping to detect the existence or absence of proviral DNA in tissues/organs. One of the priorities in the HIV/AIDS field is to eliminate proviruses from latently infected resting CD4T cells and other latent cellular reservoirs in vivo. This study demonstrates the clear excision of Gag/3′-LTR and 5′-LTR/Gag fragments in latently infected human cells within mouse multiple organs/tissues by a single AAV-DJ/8 administration in HIV-infected humanized BLT mice. This finding also validates the vast extent of tissue reservoirs harboring HIV-1 viruses. However, further studies are needed to target latently infected T cells in order to eliminate viremia rebound after cART.

74 Wang M.

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et al. Efficient delivery of genome-editing proteins using bioreducible lipid nanoparticles. , 75 Sun W.

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Gu Z. Self-assembled DNA nanoclews for the efficient delivery of CRISPR-Cas9 for genome editing. + T cells, monocytes/macrophages, or hematopoietic stem cells, via the continuous and extensive exploration of new AAV serotypes, 62 Senís E.

Fatouros C.

Große S.

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Niopek D.

Mueller A.K.

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Grimm D. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated genome engineering: an adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector toolbox. 76 Hu P.

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Chesnut J.D. Improved delivery of Cas9 protein/gRNA complexes using lipofectamine CRISPRMAX. The findings reported here provide justification for further clinical development of the Cas9/sgRNA approach for HIV-1 excision in preventing and improving HIV-1 diseases. However, its pharmacological index and window need to be evaluated further in a more clinically relevant animal model, such as simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected non-human primates. In addition, the future of the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing system in vivo would rely on a very effective gene/protein delivery vehicle such as nanoparticles, which can be manufactured in different sizes with different targeting properties.Gene delivery efficiency will be improved over time for HIV-1 latent cells, such as resting CD4T cells, monocytes/macrophages, or hematopoietic stem cells, via the continuous and extensive exploration of new AAV serotypes,integrase-deficient lentiviruses,and nanoparticles.

78 Tycko J.

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et al. RNA-directed gene editing specifically eradicates latent and prevents new HIV-1 infection. , 15 Kaminski R.

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Khalili K.

Hu W.

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et al. RNA-directed gene editing specifically eradicates latent and prevents new HIV-1 infection. , 44 Tsai S.Q.

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et al. Targeted and genome-wide sequencing reveal single nucleotide variations impacting specificity of Cas9 in human stem cells. Potential off-target effects of the Cas9/sgRNA system in mammalian cells have been a great concern in this field. Many technologies and strategies have been developed in recent years and Cas9 specificity has been improved significantly; however, continued vigilance is still required (for review, see Tycko et al.). Although plenty of studies, including ours, have used various strategies, such as whole-genome sequencing,genome-wide, unbiased identification of DSBs enabled by sequencing (GUIDE-seq),digenome sequencing (digenome-seq),, and direct in situ breaks labeling, enrichment on streptavidin, and next-generation sequencing (BLESS)to measure off-target effects, none or very few off-target effects have been detected thus far.However, further comprehensive and deep analysis on the potential off-target effects for Cas9/sgRNA-mediated HIV excision is still needed before clinical trials.

In conclusion, the saCas9 protein’s smaller size allows duplex or even quadruplex sgRNA-expressing cassettes to be delivered in an all-in-one AAV vector for high-titer packaging and robust gene transduction in cell cultures and animal models. The saCas9 with quadruplex sgRNAs targeting both 5′- and 3′-end LTRs and structural Gag and Pol regions induces versatile patterns of small indel mutations and large fragmental deletions and thus provides optimal efficiency of HIV-1 genome excision. The feasibility and efficacy of HIV-1 excision in animals via this highly promising AAV gene therapy will pave the way toward clinical trials in the near future.