Dissecting the epigenetic regulation of the fetal hemoglobin genes to unravel a novel therapeutic approach for β-hemoglobinopathies

Simone Amistadi, Letizia Fontana, Chiara Magnoni, Tristan Felix, Matteo Kane Charvin, Pierre Martinucci, Candice Gautier, Lilian Greau, Bettina Bessières, Panagiotis Antoniou, Oriana Romano, Eric Allemand, Claudio Mussolino, Annarita Miccio

Source :

Nucleic Acids Research

2025 Jul 8

Pmid / DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaf637

Abstract

Beta-hemoglobinopathies are severe genetic diseases caused by mutations affecting the production of the adult β-globin chain. The clinical severity is mitigated by the co-inheritance of mutations that reactivate the production of the fetal β-like γ-globin in adults. However, the epigenetic mechanisms underlying the adult-to-fetal hemoglobin (HbA-to-HbF) switching are still not fully understood. Here, we used epigenome editing technologies to dissect the molecular mechanisms underlying γ- and β-globin gene regulation and to develop novel potential therapeutics for β-hemoglobinopathies. Targeted removal of DNA methylation by dCas9-Tet1 (alone or together with the deposition of histone acetylation by CBP-dCas9) at the fetal promoters led to efficient and durable γ-globin reactivation, demonstrating that DNA methylation is a driver for HbF repression. This strategy, characterized by high specificity and a good safety profile, led to a substantial correction of the pathological phenotype in erythroid cells from patients with sickle cell disease.

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