key: cord-0028227-v0rtz2cj authors: Pini, Veronica; Mariot, Virginie; Dumonceaux, Julie; Counsell, John; O’Neill, Helen C.; Farmer, Sarah; Conti, Francesco; Muntoni, Francesco title: Transiently expressed CRISPR/Cas9 induces wild-type dystrophin in vitro in DMD patient myoblasts carrying duplications date: 2022-03-08 journal: Sci Rep DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-07671-w sha: ef99153300e09b4ab7a952ba07cf5e6e0e3ad0da doc_id: 28227 cord_uid: v0rtz2cj Among the mutations arising in the DMD gene and causing Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD), 10–15% are multi-exon duplications. There are no current therapeutic approaches with the ability to excise large multi-exon duplications, leaving this patient cohort without mutation-specific treatment. Using CRISPR/Cas9 could provide a valid alternative to achieve targeted excision of genomic duplications of any size. Here we show that the expression of a single CRISPR/Cas9 nuclease targeting a genomic region within a DMD duplication can restore the production of wild-type dystrophin in vitro. We assessed the extent of dystrophin repair following both constitutive and transient nuclease expression by either transducing DMD patient-derived myoblasts with integrating lentiviral vectors or electroporating them with CRISPR/Cas9 expressing plasmids. Comparing genomic, transcript and protein data, we observed that both continuous and transient nuclease expression resulted in approximately 50% dystrophin protein restoration in treated myoblasts. Our data demonstrate that a high transient expression profile of Cas9 circumvents its requirement of continuous expression within the cell for targeting DMD duplications. This proof-of-concept study therefore helps progress towards a clinically relevant gene editing strategy for in vivo dystrophin restoration, by highlighting important considerations for optimizing future therapeutic approaches. Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a severe and incurable neuromuscular disorder affecting 1 in 5000 individuals worldwide 1 . DMD is caused by mutations arising in the DMD gene encoding dystrophin, a cytoskeletal protein essential for stabilizing the sarcolemma and connecting the inner muscle fiber cytoskeleton with the extracellular matrix 2 . When dystrophin is defective or absent, muscle fibres degenerate and patients become wheelchair dependent by their early teens. Cardiac and respiratory complications due to dystrophin absence in heart, diaphragm and intercostal muscles are responsible for the premature death of DMD patients, that generally occurs by the third decade of life 3, 4 . Intragenic deletions, duplications or point mutations are the main kind of mutations originating in DMD gene 5 . Within the large mutations, that are the most common in DMD patients (80%), 14% are multi-exon duplications 1 . The mutation-agnostic therapeutic approaches under development, such as gene therapies using adenoassociated viral vectors (AAVs) as a vehicle to deliver a miniaturized but functional dystrophin molecule (mini/ micro-dystrophin), could be applicable to all DMD patients including those carrying duplications. However, due to capacity of the AAVs, less than 50% of the coding sequence of the DMD gene can be delivered using this approach, and as such the resulting internally deleted dystrophin isoform cannot totally compensate for dystrophin absence. In the best scenario, this would result in a Becker-like phenotype, an allelic condition to DMD, with variable degrees of clinical severity 6 www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Exon skipping by antisense oligonucleotides, potentially applicable to 60-80% of patients with disrupted dystrophin reading frame secondary to deletions 7 , could theoretically also be used for duplications. Small duplications encompassing one or a small number of exons (such as DMD exon 2 and exons 2-7) were corrected in vitro in human myoblasts carrying DMD exon 2 duplication by using a phosphorodiamidate morpholino antisense oligonucleotide chemistry 8 . However, exon skipping proved to be challenging for the skipping of larger multi-exon duplications 9 . Moreover, when designing exon skipping antisense oligonucleotides for removing duplications, the level of skipping has to be carefully modulated, as excessive levels of skipping could eliminate both exon copies resulting in the transcription of a shorter mutated transcript, potentially also out-of-frame. While both AAV-based gene therapies and exon skipping could potentially ameliorate DMD disease severity, none of them can address the DMD gene itself to permanently repair the mutation. An alternative to these approaches could be found in engineered nucleases and in particular in CRISPR/ Cas9, a bacterial-derived nuclease able to target and cleave any genomic region that needs editing by exploiting two specific components: single guide-RNA (sgRNA) and Cas9 nuclease 10 . Acting at the genomic level, any modification introduced by CRISPR/Cas9 in the target DNA is irreversible. Depending on the mutation, and specifically in patients with nonsense mutations or duplications, DMD editing via CRISPR/Cas9 would not result in a Becker-like dystrophin, but a fully functional wild-type dystrophin that would be expressed in a proportion of nuclei, resembling the situation of DMD carriers 11 . Depending on the extent of somatic cell correction, this could be advantageous as most DMD carriers are asymptomatic or have only mild clinical symptoms. The Cas9 nuclease directed by a unique sgRNA to a duplicated DMD region would recognise and cleave two independent sites, resulting in the removal of the intervening duplicon and the restoration of the wild-type genomic sequence. This strategy has been explored before and single CRISPR/Cas9 constitutively expressed via integrating lentiviral vectors resulted in the permanent removal of the entire duplicon both in human fibroblasts (duplication of DMD exons 18-30) and myoblasts (DMD exon 2 duplication), restoring the mutated dystrophin to a wild-type state in vitro 12, 13 and thus showing the feasibility of such an approach. In this study we aimed to compare a number of different strategies to induce correction of DMD duplications. Our results confirmed that a persistent nuclease expression in vitro is efficient in restoring the mutated dystrophin in patient-derived myoblasts carrying an in-frame DMD duplication and in addition demonstrated that a similar level of editing could be achieved even with a transient CRISPR/Cas9 expression. Restoration of in-frame dystrophin duplication in transduced patient-derived myoblasts expressing CRISPR/Cas9. We identified a highly myogenic primary myoblast cell line (DUPmyo) (Fig. 1a) carrying an in-frame duplication of DMD exons 3-16, that results in the production of a mutated dystrophin protein of higher molecular weight (499 kDa) than wild-type dystrophin (427 kDa). In this cell line, the mutated, higher molecular weight protein provides a means to benchmark gene editing efficacy, by normalising full-length dystrophin expression to the duplicated protein by semi-quantitative densitometric analysis of Western blots. We designed nucleases targeting intronic regions within the DMD gene duplicon, considering that the prevalent repair mechanism of DNA breaks (non-homologous end-joining) 14 could randomly introduce insertions and/or deletions (indels) at the break site and potentially disrupt the DMD gene reading frame if occurring in an exon 15 . We screened sgRNAs targeting four regions of DMD intron 9 (Supplementary Table 1a) , which lies within the exon 2-20 hotspot where about 5% of genomic breakpoints are detected in DMD patients carrying duplications 16 . The targeted genomic regions were chosen based on the rarity of polymorphisms that could lead to a reduction or loss in the efficiency of the nucleases 17 . sgRNA2 showed the best cleavage efficiency in HEK293T cells (35.3% ± 0.56), followed by sgRNA1 (31.8% ± 0.2) and sgRNA4 (29.8% ± 0.41), while sgRNA3 failed to generate cleaved products of the expected size ( Supplementary Fig. 1 ). We hypothesised that permanent, constitutive expression of CRISPR/Cas9 components from integrated lentiviral vector genomes should increase the rate of cleaving dystrophin DNA at both duplicated sites, consequently restoring as much dystrophin protein as possible. We cloned sgRNA2 under the U6 promoter into an integrating lentiviral vector (LCR2) that co-expresses Cas9 and enhanced GFP (EGFP), facilitating the quantification and purification of positively transduced cells. We generated lentiviral particles expressing LCR2 and transduced DUPmyo with increasing viral doses ranging from a multiplicity of infection (MOI) 0.4 to 25.6 ( Fig. 1b) . www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Non-transduced cells were used as a negative control for the transduction, and a positive control to monitor cell viability. EGFP-positive cells were observed with the highest MOI, although this viral load was toxic as only 11.3% ± 2.6 cells were alive following transduction. On the other hand, we found that the lowest viral dose (MOI 0.4), despite inducing only a very faint fluorescence signal, resulted in the best cell viability (51.7% ± 16.8 live cells) (Fig. 1c) . We therefore selected the MOI dose of 0.4, as this dose allowed nuclease expression with a minimal toxicity for myoblasts compared to other tested dosages. We considered that this degree of transduction could result in a more controlled level of nuclease expression across cells, as each transduced cell should be limited to a single integrated lentiviral vector genome per cell. This low viral yield would also be safer, limiting the risks associated with insertional mutagenesis 18 . EGFP-positive cells transduced at 0.4 MOI were isolated via fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) (mean transduction efficiency of 4.48% ± 0.14) (Fig. 1d) . Most of the gated fluorescent cells were close to non-targeted cells, consistent with EGFP being expressed at low levels. Cleaved bands of the expected molecular size of 511 bp and 217 bp were seen in transduced samples but not in untreated cells (Fig. 1e) . The observed genomic cleavage, which had an efficiency of 29.0% ± 0.45 (Fig. 1f ) resulted in an efficient protein editing in transduced cells, despite the mutated dystrophin transcript showing a limited trend towards reduction. In fact, the wild-type dystrophin in cells expressing the nuclease accounted for approximately 50% of the total dystrophin protein (59.9% ± 6.74) (Fig. 1g -i and Supplementary Fig. 2 ). This result confirmed that integrating lentiviral particles can successfully deliver and express CRISPR/Cas9 in primary patient-derived myoblasts, remove multi-exon duplications within the DMD gene and ensure a high level of dystrophin correction in these cells. Nuclear electroporation is the most efficient non-viral method to deliver CRISPR/Cas9 to patient-derived myoblasts. Given that integrating lentiviral vectors could produce undesirable longterm effects on treated cells such as random genomic integration 19 , we proceeded to investigate whether a transient CRISPR/Cas9 expression could be sufficient to mediate dystrophin editing. As part of this process, we tested and compared several non-viral methods for delivering CRISPR/Cas9 in vitro into patient-derived myoblasts ( Fig. 2a) . Transfection efficacy in DUPmyo cells was first assessed using a GFP-expressing plasmid of 4735 Kb to facilitate the screening process. We assessed the efficiency of three commercial transfection reagents (Lipo-fectamine2000, TurboFect and GeneJuice) and measured their transfection efficiency via FACS analysis (Fig. 2b) . These methods resulted in a variable, but generally poor, transfection efficiency (around 5% or lower). The highest transfection efficiency was observed when transfecting DUPmyo with 9 μl Lipofectamine 2000 (mean transfection efficiency 6.84% ± 0.64), confirming the work of Jackson et al. in murine myoblasts 20 . 3.27% ± 1.62 fluorescent cells were detected when transfection was done with 12 μl Lipofectamine 2000, while doses of 6 μl and 15 μl Lipofectamine 2000 resulted in very low transfection rates (0.86% ± 0.26 and 0.18% ± 0.15, respectively). Transfection efficiency with TurboFect was comparable to that observed with 9 μl Lipofectamine 2000 when using 8 μl of reagent (5.3% ± 0.83). Only 0.083% ± 0.02 and 0.71% ± 0.29 fluorescent cells were seen upon DUPmyo transfection with 4 μl and 6 μl TurboFect. A poor transfection was also observed for GeneJuice, whose efficiency of transfection was less than 2% (1.89% ± 0.18). Taken together, these results confirmed the well-known difficulty of achieving a high level of transfection in primary myoblasts using common transfection reagent techniques 21, 22 . We next tested nuclear electroporation of the DNA plasmid using the Neon transfection system, which allows customization of electroporation parameters, such as the number of electric pulses, their duration and the voltage 23 . Almost 30% of cells (27.57 ± 0.75) were fluorescent following electroporation (Fig. 2c ). As this percentage of targeted cells is at least five times higher than that achieved with the previously used transfection reagents (Fig. 2d) , we decided to use NEON as a non-viral method to test the ability of an episomal Cas9 expression to correct dystrophin duplications in primary myoblasts. Transient CRISPR/Cas9 expression in immortalized myoblasts can correct dystrophin duplications with comparable efficacy to stable expression. We next proceeded to test the efficiency of dystrophin gene editing by NEON electroporation. We delivered a DNA plasmid of 8279 Kb containing a sgRNA cassette, Cas9 and GFP (Fig. 3a) . We used the universal negative control 'CR0' plasmid (targeting a sequence not present in the human genome) and CR2, which expresses sgRNA2. We first tested these plasmids in HEK293T cells and observed that the cleavage efficiency of electroporated CR2 (35.2%) was comparable to that of lentivirally-delivered LCR2 (29.9%) ( Fig. 3b and Supplementary Fig. 3 ). We electroporated DUPmyo with CR0 and CR2 and isolated the CRISPR/Cas9 expressing cells by FACS. However, the excessive passaging needed to expand the sorted cells led them to become senescent before being induced towards terminal differentiation. Further optimization was therefore carried out in immortalized DUPmyo cells (DUPmyo-i) 24 . A lower transfection efficiency of DUPmyo-i was observed compared to primary cells (mean electroporation efficiencies of 13.27% ± 1.6% and 11.5% ± 0.6 for CR2 and CR0, respectively) ( Most importantly, by densitometric analysis of dystrophin Western blot we observed that transient CRISPR/ Cas9 expression by electroporation restored dystrophin to a wild-type state, (Fig. 3g and Supplementary Fig. 5 ) allowing a mean reduction of mutated dystrophin protein of 45.7% ± 6.10 (Fig. 3h) . The amount of wild-type dystrophin detected following electroporation (54% ± 7.11) was comparable to that achieved in transduced cells (59.9% ± 6.74), suggesting that transient expression of CRISPR/Cas9 is an effective method to target duplicated DNA regions within dystrophin and efficiently restore the production of a wild-type protein (Fig. 3i) . Hypothesizing that GFP expression correlates with CRISPR/Cas9 expression levels, we investigated whether GFP expression levels correlated with dystrophin editing efficacy. We performed DUPmyo-i electroporation using CR0 and CR2 plasmids and by FACS analysis we gated GFP-positive cells according to their fluorescence intensity, which is representative of Cas9 expression levels. We named the two groups 'Low' and 'High' to indicate their degree of GFP expression and sorted them accordingly via FACS (Fig. 4b) . The mean percentages of fluorescent cells in the Low populations were 8.37 ± 0.49 (CR0 Low) and 10.41 ± 0.8 (CR2 Low) whereas, in the High population, fluorescent cells accounted for 3.92 ± 0.28 (CR0 High) and 3.60 ± 0.39 (CR2 High). As expected, we noted a dose response, with the percentage of genomic targeting reduced in the Low (19.8% ± 1.12) compared to the High population (28.0% ± 3.01) (Fig. 4c,d) . We also observed a similar trend in the transcript, with the mutated transcript being more reduced in cells of the High population (Fig. 4e,f) . By averaging the transcript correction level of the Low and High cell populations expressing CR2 (0.58 ± 0.03) we obtained a similar mean level of transcript correction to that detected in the total pool of GFP-positive cells (0.62 ± 0.10), supporting the hypothesis that the level of editing seen in the total pool of cells expressing Cas9 is likely given by the contribution of cells expressing both high and low Cas9 levels. Wild-type dystrophin was also detected in both Low and High populations, although its amount was higher (38.6% ± 0.88) in cells expressing most Cas9 than in cells that poorly expressed Cas9 (25.23% ± 0.65) (Fig. 4g ). This indicates that the intensity of a transient nuclease expression is a crucial factor to control for, as weak and strong Cas9 expression can achieve different levels of protein restoration. Among the genetic mutations reported in the DMD gene, 10-15% are multi-exon duplications (1). A recently described strategy for the correction of DMD duplications in vitro relies on a single CRISPR/Cas9 nuclease designed to cleave a specific site within the DMD duplicon and expressed by integrating lentiviral vectors 12, 13 . We confirmed the validity of this approach and compared the editing level of DMD duplications following either a permanent or transient nuclease expression in vitro, represented by myoblast transduction with integrating lentiviral vectors and electroporation, respectively. Lentivirus was used as an exemplar for viral vector mediated CRISPR/Cas9 delivery, which is more commonly being explored as a therapeutic gene editing platform in the context of AAVs, as AAV vectors also showed longterm expression in muscle in vivo 25 . Electroporation, which is also being investigated for DMD gene editing 26, 27 , proved to be the best among the transient transfection techniques we screened for delivering CRISPR/Cas9expressing plasmids to primary myoblasts, and was therefore chosen to perform our proof-of-concept studies. We first questioned whether non-viral CRISPR/Cas9 expression would be able to induce the repair of dystrophin duplications in vitro. We identified the Neon transfection system as an optimal method for in vitro delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 transgenes. Surprisingly but encouragingly, transient but efficient expression of CRISPR/Cas9 using the Neon system resulted in a similar efficiency of dystrophin correction to the stable, durable viral delivery system. Considering that in humans between 29 and 57% of wild-type dystrophin could completely prevent muscular dystrophy when expressed in the majority of muscle fibres within the muscle 28 , the level of dystrophin correction we achieved with both approaches (around 50%) could be sufficient to provide a therapeutic benefit, if obtained in vivo. By analysing the amount of wild-type dystrophin protein in cells expressing either low or high levels of GFP, we observed that the cells which were mostly contributing to the mutated dystrophin repair were those with www.nature.com/scientificreports/ the highest fluorescence, that we hypothesize to have the highest nuclease levels. This observation provided the proof-of-concept that efficient, but transient, expression of Cas9 can be as effective as a weaker, constitutive expression. Therefore, as long as CRISPR/Cas9 is expressed at sufficient levels, it does not need to be constantly present within cells for efficient correction of DMD duplications. From a therapeutic perspective, a strategy using viral vectors such as AAVs could have an advantage compared to a single transfection obtained with non-viral methods, as the persistent presence of the CRISPR/Cas9 nuclease in the cytoplasm could help the repair of new nuclei originating from the diseased muscles' regenerative process. However, the increased number of muscle nuclei is inevitably coupled with focal muscle fibre degeneration and regeneration resulting from the high degree of muscle damage. This would likely lead to a dilution effect of the transgene, especially if administered in early childhood. As such, the ideal therapeutic formulation for DMD would be particularly efficacious if developed to also target satellite cells. Acting as muscle-specific stem cells, satellite cells expressing wild-type dystrophin would allow the replacement of damaged fibres with fully functional ones 29 . However, routinely used AAVs have a generally low tropism for satellite cells 30 . Also, the repeated administration of AAVs is currently precluded by the strong immune response observed upon repeated AAV injections 31 . Delivering the nuclease via a non-viral method, instead, could circumvent such issue and, if required, be repeated. A minimal and temporary nuclease expression might also increase the tolerance of the immune system against Cas9 protein and limit the triggering of the immune response to the Cas9 itself, observed in healthy human adults 32 . Finally, reducing the half-life of Cas9 in the cytoplasm proved to be efficient in lowering the chances of observing off-target effects 33 . The delivery of CRISPR/Cas9 via electroporation (which we tested in vitro as a proof-of-concept to represent non-viral techniques) could only be applied for ex vivo cell-based therapies. However, many other non-viral strategies such as lipid and protein-based nanoparticles are being considered for the delivery of the nuclease not only in vitro but also in vivo [34] [35] [36] . Recently developed nanoparticle formulations overcome the viral-mediated entry in the cells by relying on endocytosis, and proved to have a very limited toxicity, efficient genomic editing and high targeting specificity when administered intramuscularly in mdx mice 33 . These encouraging results suggest that such technologies could also become a valid choice also for a systemic CRISPR/Cas9 delivery, which would be the optimal option to treat any disorder such as DMD, that not only affects muscles body wise but also has a multisystemic involvement 37, 38 . Any in vivo CRISPR/Cas9-based therapeutic design should therefore follow a "hit-and-run" strategy for expression of Cas9 39, 40 . Further optimizations to increase both the efficiency and safety of the single CRISPR/ Cas9 nuclease approach, including an in-depth study of genomic off-target effects, will be needed before clinically translating CRISPR/Cas9 for DMD. However, it is highly likely that refinement of CRISPR/Cas9 technologies will proceed in conjunction with the rapidly evolving nonviral delivery systems, and the new knowledge obtained by the recently developed nanoparticles-based mRNA vaccines designed to fight the COVID-19 pandemic will hopefully accelerate the identification of safe and efficacious CRISPR/Cas9-based therapeutic formulations. Ethics statement. The work carried out in this project involved the manipulation of human cells obtained from the MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases BioBank. Primary myoblasts used for this work were obtained from a DMD patient carrying an in-frame duplication of DMD exons 3-16. Clinically, this patient performs within the better end of the DMD spectrum. The disease manifested when the patient was 3 years old with global developmental delay; later on he was diagnosed with autistic spectrum disorder and aggressive behaviour. Since the age of 5, the patient has been taking steroids. He is currently 13 and still ambulant. The patient has a positive Gowers' sign (+ 4 s), with only partial antigravity power in hip and shoulder proximal muscles. Ethical approval and consent for research have been obtained to facilitate pharmacological, gene and cell therapy trials in neuromuscular disorders (NRES Committee London-West London & GTAC, REC reference number 06/Q0406/33) and to allow the use of cells as a model system to study pathogenesis and therapeutic strategies for neuromuscular disorders (NRES Committee London-Stanmore, REC reference 13/LO/1826), in compliance with national guidelines regarding the use of human-derived cell lines for research. Written informed consent was obtained from the patient's guardians. sgRNA design and cloning in integrating lentiviral CRISPR/Cas9 expression vectors. The full intron 9 sequence of the human DMD gene was retrieved through the Ensemble genome browser (www. ensem bl. org/). We selected genomic regions spanning from 176 to 225 bp throughout DMD intron 9, and run them through the algorithm developed by Feng Zhang laboratory at MIT (http:// crispr. mit. edu/). For each genomic target, we chose the returned sgRNAs with the highest quality score (inversely correlated to the number of their potential off-target effects). Details about each genomic sequence and its genomic location are provided in Supplementary Table 1 together with the sequence of sgRNAs 1-4. sgRNAs were cloned into the integrating LentiCRISPRv1 plasmid (Addgene #49535) from Feng Zhang's laboratory. The best sgRNA (sgRNA2) was also cloned into the integrating pL-CRISPR.EFS.GFP plasmid from Benjamin Ebert's laboratory (Addgene #57818), following the specified protocol. Eagle's Medium (DMEM) (Gibco) supplemented with 10% foetal bovine serum (FBS) (Life Technology). Plasmid transfection occurred using Lipofectamine 2000 (LF2000), at a ratio of 1 μg DNA to 2 μl LF2000. After 24 h, transfection medium was replaced with fresh culture medium and cells were kept in culture at 37 °C and 5% CO2 for further 24 h. 24 . Primary and immortalized myoblasts were cultured in complete Skeletal Muscle Growth medium (PromoCell) containing 3 mM GlutaMax (Invitrogen), 10% (v/v) FBS and 40 μg/ml Gentamicin (Sigma). Cells were maintained at 37 °C and 5% CO2. Terminal differentiation of human myoblasts was achieved by culturing cells for 5-7 days with a confluence of 70% with DMEM (Mega-Cell), 2% (v/v) FBS, 1X non-essential amino-acids, 2 mM Glutamine, 0.5 mM, β-mercaptoethanol and 5 ng/ml basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF). Desmin immunostaining and myogenicity assay. Terminally differentiated cells were fixed with 4% paraformaldehyde and permeabilized with Triton-X. After two phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) washes, 250 μl 10% goat serum was added and incubated for 30 min at room temperature. Desmin primary antibody (Dako, mouse anti-human) was diluted 1:100 in 10% goat serum and PBS. This was added to the cells and incubated for 60 min at room temperature. DAPI (Thermo Fisher Scientific) was also added (1:10,000) and incubated together with desmin antibody to stain the nuclei in each cell. Following three PBS washes, cells were incubated with the secondary antibody (Invitrogen, goat anti-mouse conjugated with Alexa488) prepared in PBS (1:100 dilution). Myogenicity was assessed by microscope analysis by measuring the ratio between the total number of desminpositive cells with more than 3 nuclei, and the total number of DAPI stained nuclei. Nuclear electroporation of human myoblasts-NEON. 5 DNA fragments were purified with the QIAquick PCR purification Kit (QIAgen). T7E1 endonuclease (New England BioLabs) assay was performed on 200 ng of purified tdPCR product according to the manufacturer's instructions. T7E1 reaction stopped by the addition of 2 μl of 0.25 M EDTA was run on a Novex TBE gel (Life Technologies) as specified by the manufacturer. The TBE gel was then stained for 15 min with SybrGold (Life Technologies) diluted 10000X in 200 ml TBE, at room temperature on an orbital shaker in the dark. The gel was visualized with the Gel Doc XR + system (Bio-Rad). The efficiency of CRISPR/Cas9 genomic cleavage efficiency was quantified by exporting in Excel format the data from the densitometric band analysis, which was done by using Fiji software (https:// imagej. net/ Fiji). CRISPR/Cas9 cleavage efficiency, expressed in percentage, was calculated as follows: upper cleaved band area value/ (Upper cleaved band + Full-length band area values) × 100. Quantification of duplicated and wild-type dystrophin transcript. RNA was extracted from myotubes using the RNeasy Mini kit (QIAgen) and retrotranscribed to cDNA with the High-Capacity RNA-to-cDNA Kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific). qPCR was run by a StepOne device (Thermo Fisher Scientific) on 10 ng of cDNA as follows: 95 °C for 3 min, and 40 cycles of 10 s at 95 °C and 1 min at 60 °C. qPCR data were exported in Excel format and analysed using the ∆∆Ct method. To avoid the amplification of multiple dystrophin transcript isoforms, DMD exon 20 was chosen as anchor region to normalize and quantify dystrophin transcript correction, as it is located outside the duplication and before any of the dystrophin promoters throughout DMD gene. Protein quantification and electrophoresis. Proteins were extracted from myotubes by replacing culture medium with NHC lysis buffer (4 M urea, 125 mM Tris pH 6.8 and 4% SDS) supplemented with 1X Complete Protease Inhibitor Cocktail Tablets (Roche). Samples were and left on ice for 10 min after which they were collected, boiled for 3 min and centrifuged at 14000×g for 10 min at 4 °C. Protein quantification was done with the Pierce BCA protein assay (Thermo Fisher Scientific). 50 μg of protein samples were run on a precast NuPAGE Novex Tris-Acetate 3-8% gradient gel (Invitrogen) according to manufacturer's instructions. 10 μl of the HiMark pre-stained protein standard (Life Technology) and the Odyssey One-Color protein molecular weight marker (Licor) were included as a reference molecular weight to analyse the protein of interest. The gel was run on ice at 75 V for 45 min to allow dystrophin to slowly enter the gel and then at 150 V for 2 h and 15 min. At completion of the run, the gel was placed in contact with a polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) low-fluorescence membrane. Protein transfer was performed at 30 V for 3 h with the electrophoresis apparatus XCell Sure Lock Mini-Cell (Thermo Fisher Scientific). 300 ml of diluted Transfer buffer (270 ml distilled water, 15 ml 20X NuPAGE Transfer buffer and 15 ml methanol) were placed in the inner chamber, while the outer chamber was filled with 600 ml of cold water, both replaced after 1.5 h. The transfer apparatus was placed in ice to avoid overheating. Following blotting, the membrane was blocked with 10% non-fat milk powder (, OXOID) diluted in Tris buffered saline (TBS) for 1 h at room temperature. The PVDF membrane was then incubated overnight at 4 °C with 10 ml 5% non-fat milk diluted in TBS-Tween (TBS-T), which contained the primary rabbit anti-human dystrophin (Abcam, 1:200) and mouse anti-human vinculin (Sigma, 1:100.000) antibodies. Vinculin antibody protein was used to control if the samples to be analysed are differentiated to a similar extent. This antibody recognizes both vinculin and its slightly higher molecular weight isoform meta-vinculin, whose expression increases on skeletal muscle differentiation 41 . The membrane was then washed three times with TBS-T and incubated with biotinylated secondary antibodies (Abcam) (1:1000) for 1 h at room temperature. Following another three TBS-T washes, the membrane was incubated 1 h at room temperature with streptavidin-HRP (1:5000) (Thermo Fisher Scientific) in order to amplify the signal. The membrane was washed with TBS-T and incubated for 1 min with 2 ml of the Luminata Forte Western HRP substrate (Millipore). Signal was detected placing the membrane in a ChemiDoc Imager and densitometric analysis of detected bands was performed by using the ImageLab software (Bio-Rad). The amount of restored protein was calculated as the ratio between the amount of duplicated and wild-type dystrophin protein. Microscopy and image capture. The Olympus IX Inverted microscope (Olympus Life Science) and Leica DMR microscope (Leica Microsystem) were used to acquire images. Any image processing was done by Fiji software (https:// fiji. sc/). Replicate experiments were expressed as the mean ± the standard error of the mean. Statistical analysis aimed to verify the effect of CRISPR/Cas9 treatment versus untreated controls were performed by means of the GraphPad Prism software. Results were analysed by applying the Mann-Whitney test (comparison between two groups) or Kruskal-Wallis (comparison between three groups or more) as, due the small sample size, data were assumed to be not normally distributed. Statistical significance was set at P-values below 0.05. | (2022) 12:3756 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-07671-w www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Primer design. Primers were designed by using the primer3 on-line tool (primer3.ut.ee/) and synthesized by Sigma-Aldrich. All primers were provided as desalted stocks which were diluted in pure water to a concentration of 100 μM and stored at -20 °C. When needed, they were further diluted in sterile water to a concentration of 10 μM. The list of all primers designed to amplify CRISPR/Cas9 targets is provided in Supplementary Table 2 . All data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article (and its Supplementary Information files). 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We would also like to thank Dr. Marc Moore for his intellectual contribution, Dr. Silvia Torelli who kindly provided the protein sample extracted from the immortalized H2K 2B4 cells, Dr. Ayad Eddaoudi for generating the FACS data and Prof. Jennifer Morgan for proofreading the manuscript. The support of the MRC Neuromuscular Centre at UCL and of the Dubowitz Neuromuscular Centre is also acknowledged. Finally, we are grateful for the financial support of the Neuromuscular Biobank of the MRC Neuromuscular Centre, the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, and the University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trusts. F.M. is member of the SAB of Rare Disease Pfizer and of Dyne Therapeutics, and has received speakers honoraria from Sarepta Therapeutics. The remaining authors declare no competing interests. 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