Abstract
The gradual accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) is a neuropathologic hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease (AD); playing a key role in disease progression. Aβ is generated by the sequential cleavage of amyloid precursor protein (APP) by β- and γ-secretases, with BACE-1 (β-site APP cleaving enzyme-1) cleavage as the rate limiting step 1–3. CRISPR/Cas9 guided gene-editing is emerging as a promising tool to edit pathogenic mutations and hinder disease progression 4,5,6 However, few studies have applied this technology to neurologic diseases 7–9. Besides technical caveats such as low editing efficiency in brains and limited in vivo validation 7, the canonical approach of ‘mutation-correction’ would only be applicable to the small fraction of neurodegenerative cases that are inherited (i.e. < 10% of AD, Parkinson’s, ALS); with a new strategy needed for every gene. Moreover, feasibility of CRISPR/Cas9 as a therapeutic possibility in sporadic AD has not been explored. Here we introduce a strategy to edit endogenous APP at the extreme C-terminus and reciprocally manipulate the amyloid pathway – attenuating β-cleavage and Aβ, while up-regulating neuroprotective a-cleavage. APP N-terminus, as well as compensatory APP homologues remain intact, and key physiologic parameters remain unaffected. Robust APP-editing is seen in cell lines, cultured neurons, human embryonic stem cells/iPSC-neurons, and mouse brains. Our strategy works by limiting the physical association of APP and BACE-1, and we also delineate the mechanism that abrogates APP/BACE-1 interaction in this setting. Our work offers an innovative ‘cut and silence’ gene-editing strategy that could be a new therapeutic paradigm for AD.