{"title":"工程CRISPR治疗:Fyodor Urnov访谈","authors":"Fyodor D. Urnov, Jonathan D. Grinstein","doi":"10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fdu","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"GEN BiotechnologyVol. 2, No. 5 Asked & AnsweredFree AccessEngineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor UrnovFyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. GrinsteinFyodor D. Urnov*Address correspondence to: Fyodor D. Urnov, Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute. E-mail Address: [email protected]Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute.Search for more papers by this author and Jonathan D. GrinsteinSenior Editor, GEN Media Group.Search for more papers by this authorPublished Online:16 Oct 2023https://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduAboutSectionsPDF/EPUB Permissions & CitationsPermissionsDownload CitationsTrack CitationsAdd to favorites Back To Publication ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Fyodor Urnov, Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI)Fyodor Urnov is a pioneer in the field of genome editing and one of the scientists most invested in expanding the availability and utility of CRISPR-based therapies to the broadest possible population. He envisions a world in which genome editing can treat the nearly 400 million people who are suffering from one of the 7000 diseases brought on by gene mutations.After his PhD in 1996 from Brown University, Urnov worked as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Alan Wolffe at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In 2000, Urnov joined Wolffe in moving to Sangamo Therapeutics in California. During his 16 years at Sangamo, Urnov and his colleagues performed the first demonstration using zinc-finger nucleases to modify DNA in human cells in 2005, coining the term “genome editing” in the process.1After that, Urnov led collaborative teams that created large-scale genome editing applications in crop genetics, model animal reverse genetics, and human somatic cell genetics. While at Sangamo, Urnov also led a cross-functional team from basic discovery to the initial design of the first-in-human clinical trials for sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia, which are being conducted in collaboration with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital and UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center.In 2019, Urnov became the Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI), working alongside Nobel laureate Jennifer Doudna, and a Professor in the Departments of Genetics, Genomics, and Development at the University of California, Berkeley. At the IGI, Urnov works in collaborative teams to develop first-in-human applications of experimental CRISPR-based therapeutics for sickle cell disease (with Mark Walters, UCSF), genetic disorders of the immune system (with Alexander Marson, UCSF/IGI), radiation injury (with Jonathan Weissman, MIT/Whitehead Institute), cystic fibrosis (with Ross Wilson, IGI), and neurological disorders (with Weill Neurohub and Roche/Genentech).In this exclusive interview, GEN Biotechnology talks to Urnov about his career in genome editing, from his early days at Sangamo to the establishment of his current company, Tune Therapeutics, which he cofounded with Charles Gersbach and Akira Matsuno (president and CFO). He elaborates on his plans for “CRISPR cures on demand” and the challenges that stand in the way of his goal.(This interview has been lightly edited for length and accuracy.)I read through your 2021 article for Molecular Therapy (“Imagine CRISPR Cures”),2 which I am guessing is a reference to the John Lennon song, and your 2022 op-ed for the New York Times (“We Can Cure Disease by Editing a Person's DNA. Why Aren't We?”).3 In those articles, you lay out the improvements necessary to make CRISPR cures for n = 1 diseases and rare diseases a reality. Where are we today in realizing your CRISPR-cure-on-demand vision?Urnov: We have in front of us clinical data that genetic therapies for severe disease can be curative. This wasn't a given. Genetic engineering to treat disease was proposed in 1972 by Ted Friedman at UCSD. That's 50 years ago! The first gene therapy trials were done at the NIH in 1989. The first glimmers that gene therapy can work came in the 2000s; CRISPR came online in 2012; the first human was treated with CRISPR in 2019. Looking back at that time, it staggers the imagination how this early period of incubation—1989 through the early 2010s—where things were sort of working, sometimes there are glitches. But then the field hit its stride and we now have on the order of 15–20 gene therapies just for disorders of the blood alone, where we have pretty spectacular curative effects.And when I say curative, I don't mean a patient gets mildly better. I mean something like adenosine deaminase deficiency, severe combined immune deficiency. Don Kohn (UCLA) and Claire Booth (University College London) had 50 children who were certain to die, and they are basically cured by gene therapy or in two cases by bone marrow transplant. Think about that!Similarly, as one looks at what CRISPR has been doing clinically, look at the data from clinical trials for sickle cell disease from CRISPR Therapeutics and Vertex Pharmaceuticals. They have treated people who have had multiple episodes of pain before being administered their own CRISPR-edited cells. And they have shown that dozens of human beings are now free of pain episodes (in the case of sickle) or need for transfusion. Or look at Intellia, which is treating ATTR amyloidosis; within a month of being administered a teaspoon of CRISPR—it is astonishing. You have 95% reduction in the bloodstream of these human beings of this toxic protein. So, blood is editable, the liver is editable. Major companies, biotech and pharma, are showing how well it works.Nobody is celebrating this in the rare disease space because the rare diseases under the current system are just going to be left by the roadside. There are just not enough human beings with, say, rare disease number 75 out of 5000 to justify the commercial investment in taking that medicine through development, clinical trials then regulatory approval… We have examples where companies took on genetic therapies that they simply could not figure out how to commercialize… There are 17 diseases where lentiviral gene therapy was curative, the list is growing—but only four of them are commercialized.For about three of the others, commercialization has been halted and none of the recent ones are being commercialized. So as Kohn says, the list of diseases we have cured is growing at the bottom and the list of diseases that are commercialized and approved is shrinking from the top.The realization that CRISPR can be this powerful is now a definitive component of the momentum that the system has to change. I am unaware, unfortunately, of a single gene-editing trial anywhere in the world for genetic disease that will be all academic and all nonprofit—other than the one we have, which is led by Mark Walters (University of California, San Francisco). It gives me zero pleasure to say that we are the only ones. There should be literally 100 trials such as this—the patients are out there and the technology is there. So, as we think about getting closer to a world where these diseases are not left by the wayside, we are probably 20% of the way in. I will also say that the remaining 80% are going to be more challenging than the first 20%.The first 20% of the way that we are in basically shows that academic and nonprofit centers have all the relevant expertise to design a CRISPR medicine, to administer it to animals, and in a few cases really get the program to a point where, if only we could manufacture the medicine affordably, if only we could go through clinical trials affordably, if only there was a regulatory framework where we would not be burdened by studies that are millions of dollars and years in length, which is what currently the costs are.The next 3–5 years, I see as almost a moral must for our field. We have to take the momentum that CRISPR can be curative, that gene therapy can be curative. We have to take the established fact that there are academic and nonprofit institutions across the world with CRISPR expertise. I am sitting in the center of one of them (UC Berkeley); our sister campus at UCSF is a world leader in developing these therapies.Our sister campus, UCLA, is another leader. We at UC Berkeley are a CRISPR center of excellence. There are other places like that, Children's Hospital Boston, Penn Medicine, Seattle Children's, St. Jude. What currently does not exist is a way to support these institutions and create a dedicated manufacturing and regulatory framework for them where, within the realm of academic nonprofit medicine, they can start rapidly developing, de-risking and administering these cures for n = 1.Why don't we have that? Well, we have never had a technology as versatile as CRISPR. In other words, the reason that there is not some sort of wonderful environment where you can develop and deliver a CRISPR cure in 6 months is we have never had a reason to build it! Now we do. The momentum to have the regulatory manufacturing and logistical and clinical environments now aligned with the promise of the technology comes from the fact that the technology has demonstrated definitive curative potential.You are the cofounder of a biotech company called Tune Therapeutics. Can you give us the Spark Notes summary of epigenome editing? What can epigenetic editing do that base and prime editing cannot? If it is not a one-and-done treatment, why would you go this route as opposed to using a genetic tool like CRISPR for permanent changes?Urnov: I really hope you booked 3 hours for this interview!Why does fiber protect from colon cancer? It is because, in your colon, the fiber gets fermented to make a chemical called sodium butyrate, which enters the cells of the lining of the colon, and it changes chemical marks on genes that protect those colon cells from cancer. Those marks on the protein coating of the genes and on the DNA, itself don't change what the genes say, those marks change what the genes do.So next time you have some oatmeal, close your eyes, and visualize that fiber being fermented in your colon, making butyrate and the butyrate entering the cells that line your colon entering the nucleus and that chemical keeping the genes that protect you from cancer on. First of all, fiber is good for you, both for cardiovascular disease and colorectal health. This is a great example of how our genes learned from experience because that is literally what epigenetics is. Yes, we leave this mortal coil with more or less the same DNA that we are born with, but what our genes do in our lifetime changes, not just because we age, but because we go through various exposures. We know from striking public health evidence how powerful keeping a healthy epigenome can be.In the United States and many developed countries, if a woman chooses to become pregnant, her physician will recommend that she takes a dietary supplement called folate. Folate is less interesting than what it does. It allows the developing fetus to have a healthy epigenome specifically in its spine. It prevents the prevalence of spina bifida. And there is definitive epidemiological evidence that dietary folate in a woman who chooses to have a biological child before conception and through pregnancy will keep the genes in the developing fetus and the baby that contribute to normal spine development in a healthy state…So, the epigenome is the sum total of these little marks from experience that our genes acquire as we go through development and life. We have known about this since the 1960s, we have known that our DNA is enveloped in proteins that have these chemical marks, and those marks have something to do with what the genes do.But until about 20 years ago, we were like astronomers staring at the stars, right? We can count them, but we cannot fly to them. Then about 20 years ago, some really amazing work that came out of a number of academic institutions and then ultimately got taken up by a technology company [Sangamo] where I have to disclose an emotional conflict of interest—I worked there for a decade and a half! You can engineer proteins that will recognize a specific gene inside a living cell and change its epigenome. What does that mean in practical terms? Imagine a gene that apparently got silenced for some reason of environmental exposure. Maybe we can wake it. Imagine a gene that is producing something unwanted; maybe we can build a protein that would engage that gene and turn it off.We don't have to imagine—this is all reality. Studies for the past 20 years have given us a proof of concept that you can turn genes on and off on demand. We need not wait for Mother Nature to smile benevolently on us, we can turn genes on and off on demand by building these epigenome editors. Notice the epi prefix: they are not gene editors, they don't change the DNA; they change what the genes do. An epigenome editor can go inside a T cell or a brain cell and turn a specific gene on and off. I want to emphasize that we humans have a great ability of proposing technologies and then getting it to work as a proof of concept, and then other technologies come on board and ultimately, it is the constellation of things that makes things real.My favorite example is the surface of the iPhone, made out of something called gorilla glass, which Corning engineered in the 1960s for use in windshields. It never caught on and sat on the shelf until Steve Jobs decided that he wanted to make his iPhone with an unbreakable glass cover. It is a great example of how multiple threads of technology come together to have a 1 + 1 = 7 effect! I think this is true for epigenome editing. We have known that we could do this since the early 2000s, but as you think about the ability to engineer new kind of proteins, both in terms of engaging the DNA and changing the epigenome, as we think about ways to rapidly profile their potency, do they do what we need them to do and how specific are they? Do they go somewhere else and turn some other genome?As we think about ways to deliver them to specific cells or organs in the body, all of that has not just undergone an incremental change in the past 20 years it has undergone a step change, where we can take a large animal, like a human primate, and inject it with a teaspoon of an epigenome editor formulated with a lipid nanoparticle (LNP). You inject it into the circulation of a monkey. And inside that LNP is an epigenome editor, engineered to turn off a gene that contributes to cardiovascular disease. Lo and behold, within a couple of weeks of administering this epi editor, the gene goes off.This is an amazing achievement, and the gene stays off for as long as the system has been looked at. We have always wanted to be able to tweak genes on and off—not just all the way on or off, but think of it as a soundboard, a bit more bass, a touch less treble, a bit more on the drums, and certainly less cowbell! This is what epigenome editing lets you do. It is like you can flip a gene on, you can flip a gene off, but you can also adjust it. Sound output… You don't need to change the DNA sequences. You simply inscribe new molecular makeup on that gene without changing what the DNA says and the gene politely obliges. That is the Spark Notes version.Is Tune Therapeutics the realization of a dream that started 25 years ago when you were a postdoc with the late Alan Wolffe?Urnov: Absolutely! Alan believed in epigenetics and chromatin as being the key to real insight into how human genes work before most people did. At the time in the 1990s, we knew chromatin existed, but people thought that chromatin gets out of the way so that the real action can begin. We now know that is not the case, but at the time it was not front and center in the minds of people working on gene control or people building therapies. Alan was remarkably ahead of his time in two ways. First, he just thought about chromatin as just incredibly deep, even though we did not know how deep the rabbit hole goes. Second, he was young. He passed away tragically in an accident in 2001 (age 42).His professional output over the previous 20 years was staggering. He was the youngest laboratory chief appointed to a chief of laboratory position at the NIH in its history. He wrote the definitive monograph on chromatin and epigenetics, which was on the table of everyone working in the field. And I will never forget the single most impactful conversation of my professional life, when Alan shows up at my bench in his laboratory in late 1999. Alan was English. He said, “Dr. Urnov, I have just had the most remarkable visit.” And he proceeded to describe the vision of engineering gene control using chromatin, epigenomic-based principles using a class of engineered proteins called zinc fingers.As far as I was concerned, Alan was Yoda except much younger. I could not believe my luck that I got to work in his laboratory. He described this vision and said, “There's a biotechnology company in Point Richmond, California.” I said, “That's amazing, Alan, thanks for telling me.” Six weeks later he calls me into his office and says, “Dr. Urnov, I have a question for you. How committed are you to a career in academia?” I remember thinking, he does not think I have it in me to be an academic scientist. What have I done? But Alan was inviting me to join him at Sangamo.A number of us went, it was the best professional move of my life. We had this extraordinary moment in 2001 where the field had just begun to realize what epigenetics could really do. And we had just begun to characterize these amazing molecular machines that inscribe epigenetic code. And to do the first experiments where we could bring in these epigenome modifiers, this was work by my colleague Philip Gregory, to endogenous human genes, and just instruct them by rewriting their epigenome.Philip would show the data at Sangamo meetings. I remember thinking, where is this going to go? Then in 2002, there were some articles on fruit flies and frogs from Dana Carroll at the University of Utah, and an article from David Baltimore's laboratory with Matt Porteus on targeted genetic engineering using the very same zinc fingers that we were using to change the epigenome. But then there was a severe adverse event in the gene therapy trial for bubble boy disease in France; 4 of 19 children developed cancer because the virus went into the wrong place [in the genome].There we were, in 2002. We have zinc fingers, which can let us get to a gene of interest. We have early evidence from flies, frogs, and reporter genes in human cells that we can create a double-strand break and repair a mutation, and we have this unmet need. We pivoted: It is not that we did not think that epigenome editing was exciting, but in terms of fixing a mutation for bubble boy disease, that felt real, like we could do this. So, we went after that. Now the rest is history, right? We got genetic editing to work. We named the technology, did all the first clinical trials, and of course we are about to get our first approved editing medicine using CRISPR-Cas technology.But all along, we were in Point Richmond, California, gene editing away. There was a hardy group of believers who never forgot that epigenome editing is a thing. And Charlie Gersbach (Duke University), my [Tune] cofounder, was one of those believers. He had his eye on that notion that you can inscribe epigenetic marks on genes, and he never took his eye off. I am very grateful to him. While everybody is running around making double-strand DNA breaks and creating interesting genetic forms, Charlie and some other academics thought this is all great, but we don't have to change the DNA to change what the genes do (Fig. 1).FIG. 1. How the epigenome controls gene expression.Epigenetic control elements are located along the length of each chromosome and alter local interactions between DNA and the histones. This keeps some genes coiled and inaccessible while opening up and making available others. These regulatory elements can alter chromatin structure by modifying histone proteins or DNA methylation and demethylation. This allows for the controlled activation or repression of genes across a wide range of cellular contexts and physiological states (Credit: Tune Therapeutics).About once a week, I see a scientific result where my first thought is, I wish Alan were alive to see this… When Tune showed the data that you can administer an epi editor to silence PCSK9 in the nonhuman primate with a durable effect, the first thought in my mind was, I wish Alan were alive to see this. I know exactly how he would have reacted. It is bittersweet.What sets Tune apart from other epigenome editing companies?Urnov: I love my field of targeted genetic and epigenetic engineering. We have a history of being a large rising tide that lifts all boats. It is a bit hard for me to say company #1 is better than company #2 because, for example, the people who have started at another epigenome editing company are some of my best professional friends. Rather, I would love to talk about what makes Tune strong, because as we have learned from a 30-year history of gene therapy, the more for-profit entities push technologies forward, the better we will get to learnings from clinical trials and preclinical development that gets us all to better platforms that become.What makes Tune strong are three things. I spent 16 years in industry. The only thing that matters with respect to ultimate success for a therapeutic: you can have a lot of money, amazing technology, and tremendous unmet need. But if you don't have the right people in the organization, it is going to fail. I think that the Tunesmiths, the melody makers, are some of the most impressive constellations of cross-functional expertise that I have ever seen.We have people who deeply understand how to engineer proteins, both in terms of routing them to specific positions in the DNA potently and specifically and in terms of what to fuse to them to create specific epi states. We have people with extraordinary skill in understanding how to read out at the cell biological level. Did we get the readout that is necessary? But all we have done so far is we have stayed in the same laboratory, right? We have built a protein that does something to a gene in a cell—that does not a therapeutic make (Fig. 2).FIG. 2. Gene expression volume control.Genetic tuning, or epigenetic editing, involves tinkering with epigenetic machinery in order to alter the expression of genes. Rather than completely activating or silencing a gene, genetic tuning allows for a much more nuanced range of effects. In certain contexts, a partial reduction or activation of gene expression is preferable to total knockout or forced over-expression. These distinctions are important to circumvent many of the technical and clinical barriers that have hindered the development of previous genomic therapeutics (Credit: Tune Therapeutics).I am so impressed with the vigor and vision with which Tune's leadership has been able to weave together a vertically integrated organization where pretty much at every station in the end-to-end journey of conceptualizing a target to then a disease therapeutic, and to then writing the target product profile, which is basically like, what are we treating? Using what? What is it going to do? What is the biological activity? What is the minimum approvable endpoint? What is the optimal problem from when you conceptualize target product profile for a disease indication too?When you flesh out the paths of attack of how you are going to deploy your platform, what you are going to need, what does the preclinical package look like, to actually doing all the relevant manufacturing tasks, and then taking it through regulatory and having the clinical perspective. I think the cross-functional team that Tune has built out is what makes it strong.Component number two is what these people have built. I am no stranger to impressive science, I have worked in organizations that know what they are doing. The Tune data are amazing. …We first met for a serious conversation about building Tune at a meeting. It was raining, so we were all glad to sit in the conference room in November in DC. And we sketched things out. I texted Charlie and said, well this has taken our dreams to reality and then some. I think the technology and the data that have come out of Tune—you feel parental, right? You teach your baby something and then you send them to college, and then you hold your breath and hope they write, but to have the report card come back and shine so brightly, that is strength number two.Strength number three is the following: We have cured every mouse on earth of every disease known to humankind. The only way to learn how to treat disease is to treat people with a disease. No amount of preclinical efficacy and safety data can teach you the key things you need to know in terms of how to actually build a medicine for that disease. So, I think Tune's strength is the clarity, vigor, and vision that leadership has managed to build and infuse the entire company with respect to a robust and healthy focus of getting Tune epi editors into the clinic.I have seen biotechnology companies perhaps too enamored of their preclinical experimentation. You have to get to human beings. I salute our leadership—seasoned professionals with scars of what can go wrong in the clinic—for the way they have been able to configure the organization toward having a very healthy and vibrant R&D pipeline while time pushing the company in a healthy way toward getting us into the clinic.References1. Urnov FD, Miller JC, Lee Y-L, et al. Highly efficient endogenous human gene correction using designed zinc-finger nucleases. Nature 2005;435(7042):646–651; doi: 10.1038/nature03556 Crossref, Medline, Google Scholar2. Urnov FD. Imagine CRISPR cures. Mol Ther 2021;29(11):3103–3106; doi: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2021.10.019 Crossref, Medline, Google Scholar3. Urnov F. Opinion | We Can Cure Disease by Editing a Person's DNA. Why Aren't We? The New York Times; 2022. Google ScholarFiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Volume 2Issue 5Oct 2023 InformationCopyright 2023, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishersTo cite this article:Fyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. Grinstein.Engineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor Urnov.GEN Biotechnology.Oct 2023.347-352.http://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduPublished in Volume: 2 Issue 5: October 16, 2023PDF download","PeriodicalId":73134,"journal":{"name":"GEN biotechnology","volume":"43 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Engineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor Urnov\",\"authors\":\"Fyodor D. Urnov, Jonathan D. Grinstein\",\"doi\":\"10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fdu\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"GEN BiotechnologyVol. 2, No. 5 Asked & AnsweredFree AccessEngineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor UrnovFyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. GrinsteinFyodor D. Urnov*Address correspondence to: Fyodor D. Urnov, Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute. E-mail Address: [email protected]Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute.Search for more papers by this author and Jonathan D. GrinsteinSenior Editor, GEN Media Group.Search for more papers by this authorPublished Online:16 Oct 2023https://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduAboutSectionsPDF/EPUB Permissions & CitationsPermissionsDownload CitationsTrack CitationsAdd to favorites Back To Publication ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Fyodor Urnov, Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI)Fyodor Urnov is a pioneer in the field of genome editing and one of the scientists most invested in expanding the availability and utility of CRISPR-based therapies to the broadest possible population. He envisions a world in which genome editing can treat the nearly 400 million people who are suffering from one of the 7000 diseases brought on by gene mutations.After his PhD in 1996 from Brown University, Urnov worked as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Alan Wolffe at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In 2000, Urnov joined Wolffe in moving to Sangamo Therapeutics in California. During his 16 years at Sangamo, Urnov and his colleagues performed the first demonstration using zinc-finger nucleases to modify DNA in human cells in 2005, coining the term “genome editing” in the process.1After that, Urnov led collaborative teams that created large-scale genome editing applications in crop genetics, model animal reverse genetics, and human somatic cell genetics. While at Sangamo, Urnov also led a cross-functional team from basic discovery to the initial design of the first-in-human clinical trials for sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia, which are being conducted in collaboration with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital and UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center.In 2019, Urnov became the Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI), working alongside Nobel laureate Jennifer Doudna, and a Professor in the Departments of Genetics, Genomics, and Development at the University of California, Berkeley. At the IGI, Urnov works in collaborative teams to develop first-in-human applications of experimental CRISPR-based therapeutics for sickle cell disease (with Mark Walters, UCSF), genetic disorders of the immune system (with Alexander Marson, UCSF/IGI), radiation injury (with Jonathan Weissman, MIT/Whitehead Institute), cystic fibrosis (with Ross Wilson, IGI), and neurological disorders (with Weill Neurohub and Roche/Genentech).In this exclusive interview, GEN Biotechnology talks to Urnov about his career in genome editing, from his early days at Sangamo to the establishment of his current company, Tune Therapeutics, which he cofounded with Charles Gersbach and Akira Matsuno (president and CFO). He elaborates on his plans for “CRISPR cures on demand” and the challenges that stand in the way of his goal.(This interview has been lightly edited for length and accuracy.)I read through your 2021 article for Molecular Therapy (“Imagine CRISPR Cures”),2 which I am guessing is a reference to the John Lennon song, and your 2022 op-ed for the New York Times (“We Can Cure Disease by Editing a Person's DNA. Why Aren't We?”).3 In those articles, you lay out the improvements necessary to make CRISPR cures for n = 1 diseases and rare diseases a reality. Where are we today in realizing your CRISPR-cure-on-demand vision?Urnov: We have in front of us clinical data that genetic therapies for severe disease can be curative. This wasn't a given. Genetic engineering to treat disease was proposed in 1972 by Ted Friedman at UCSD. That's 50 years ago! The first gene therapy trials were done at the NIH in 1989. The first glimmers that gene therapy can work came in the 2000s; CRISPR came online in 2012; the first human was treated with CRISPR in 2019. Looking back at that time, it staggers the imagination how this early period of incubation—1989 through the early 2010s—where things were sort of working, sometimes there are glitches. But then the field hit its stride and we now have on the order of 15–20 gene therapies just for disorders of the blood alone, where we have pretty spectacular curative effects.And when I say curative, I don't mean a patient gets mildly better. I mean something like adenosine deaminase deficiency, severe combined immune deficiency. Don Kohn (UCLA) and Claire Booth (University College London) had 50 children who were certain to die, and they are basically cured by gene therapy or in two cases by bone marrow transplant. Think about that!Similarly, as one looks at what CRISPR has been doing clinically, look at the data from clinical trials for sickle cell disease from CRISPR Therapeutics and Vertex Pharmaceuticals. They have treated people who have had multiple episodes of pain before being administered their own CRISPR-edited cells. And they have shown that dozens of human beings are now free of pain episodes (in the case of sickle) or need for transfusion. Or look at Intellia, which is treating ATTR amyloidosis; within a month of being administered a teaspoon of CRISPR—it is astonishing. You have 95% reduction in the bloodstream of these human beings of this toxic protein. So, blood is editable, the liver is editable. Major companies, biotech and pharma, are showing how well it works.Nobody is celebrating this in the rare disease space because the rare diseases under the current system are just going to be left by the roadside. There are just not enough human beings with, say, rare disease number 75 out of 5000 to justify the commercial investment in taking that medicine through development, clinical trials then regulatory approval… We have examples where companies took on genetic therapies that they simply could not figure out how to commercialize… There are 17 diseases where lentiviral gene therapy was curative, the list is growing—but only four of them are commercialized.For about three of the others, commercialization has been halted and none of the recent ones are being commercialized. So as Kohn says, the list of diseases we have cured is growing at the bottom and the list of diseases that are commercialized and approved is shrinking from the top.The realization that CRISPR can be this powerful is now a definitive component of the momentum that the system has to change. I am unaware, unfortunately, of a single gene-editing trial anywhere in the world for genetic disease that will be all academic and all nonprofit—other than the one we have, which is led by Mark Walters (University of California, San Francisco). It gives me zero pleasure to say that we are the only ones. There should be literally 100 trials such as this—the patients are out there and the technology is there. So, as we think about getting closer to a world where these diseases are not left by the wayside, we are probably 20% of the way in. I will also say that the remaining 80% are going to be more challenging than the first 20%.The first 20% of the way that we are in basically shows that academic and nonprofit centers have all the relevant expertise to design a CRISPR medicine, to administer it to animals, and in a few cases really get the program to a point where, if only we could manufacture the medicine affordably, if only we could go through clinical trials affordably, if only there was a regulatory framework where we would not be burdened by studies that are millions of dollars and years in length, which is what currently the costs are.The next 3–5 years, I see as almost a moral must for our field. We have to take the momentum that CRISPR can be curative, that gene therapy can be curative. We have to take the established fact that there are academic and nonprofit institutions across the world with CRISPR expertise. I am sitting in the center of one of them (UC Berkeley); our sister campus at UCSF is a world leader in developing these therapies.Our sister campus, UCLA, is another leader. We at UC Berkeley are a CRISPR center of excellence. There are other places like that, Children's Hospital Boston, Penn Medicine, Seattle Children's, St. Jude. What currently does not exist is a way to support these institutions and create a dedicated manufacturing and regulatory framework for them where, within the realm of academic nonprofit medicine, they can start rapidly developing, de-risking and administering these cures for n = 1.Why don't we have that? Well, we have never had a technology as versatile as CRISPR. In other words, the reason that there is not some sort of wonderful environment where you can develop and deliver a CRISPR cure in 6 months is we have never had a reason to build it! Now we do. The momentum to have the regulatory manufacturing and logistical and clinical environments now aligned with the promise of the technology comes from the fact that the technology has demonstrated definitive curative potential.You are the cofounder of a biotech company called Tune Therapeutics. Can you give us the Spark Notes summary of epigenome editing? What can epigenetic editing do that base and prime editing cannot? If it is not a one-and-done treatment, why would you go this route as opposed to using a genetic tool like CRISPR for permanent changes?Urnov: I really hope you booked 3 hours for this interview!Why does fiber protect from colon cancer? It is because, in your colon, the fiber gets fermented to make a chemical called sodium butyrate, which enters the cells of the lining of the colon, and it changes chemical marks on genes that protect those colon cells from cancer. Those marks on the protein coating of the genes and on the DNA, itself don't change what the genes say, those marks change what the genes do.So next time you have some oatmeal, close your eyes, and visualize that fiber being fermented in your colon, making butyrate and the butyrate entering the cells that line your colon entering the nucleus and that chemical keeping the genes that protect you from cancer on. First of all, fiber is good for you, both for cardiovascular disease and colorectal health. This is a great example of how our genes learned from experience because that is literally what epigenetics is. Yes, we leave this mortal coil with more or less the same DNA that we are born with, but what our genes do in our lifetime changes, not just because we age, but because we go through various exposures. We know from striking public health evidence how powerful keeping a healthy epigenome can be.In the United States and many developed countries, if a woman chooses to become pregnant, her physician will recommend that she takes a dietary supplement called folate. Folate is less interesting than what it does. It allows the developing fetus to have a healthy epigenome specifically in its spine. It prevents the prevalence of spina bifida. And there is definitive epidemiological evidence that dietary folate in a woman who chooses to have a biological child before conception and through pregnancy will keep the genes in the developing fetus and the baby that contribute to normal spine development in a healthy state…So, the epigenome is the sum total of these little marks from experience that our genes acquire as we go through development and life. We have known about this since the 1960s, we have known that our DNA is enveloped in proteins that have these chemical marks, and those marks have something to do with what the genes do.But until about 20 years ago, we were like astronomers staring at the stars, right? We can count them, but we cannot fly to them. Then about 20 years ago, some really amazing work that came out of a number of academic institutions and then ultimately got taken up by a technology company [Sangamo] where I have to disclose an emotional conflict of interest—I worked there for a decade and a half! You can engineer proteins that will recognize a specific gene inside a living cell and change its epigenome. What does that mean in practical terms? Imagine a gene that apparently got silenced for some reason of environmental exposure. Maybe we can wake it. Imagine a gene that is producing something unwanted; maybe we can build a protein that would engage that gene and turn it off.We don't have to imagine—this is all reality. Studies for the past 20 years have given us a proof of concept that you can turn genes on and off on demand. We need not wait for Mother Nature to smile benevolently on us, we can turn genes on and off on demand by building these epigenome editors. Notice the epi prefix: they are not gene editors, they don't change the DNA; they change what the genes do. An epigenome editor can go inside a T cell or a brain cell and turn a specific gene on and off. I want to emphasize that we humans have a great ability of proposing technologies and then getting it to work as a proof of concept, and then other technologies come on board and ultimately, it is the constellation of things that makes things real.My favorite example is the surface of the iPhone, made out of something called gorilla glass, which Corning engineered in the 1960s for use in windshields. It never caught on and sat on the shelf until Steve Jobs decided that he wanted to make his iPhone with an unbreakable glass cover. It is a great example of how multiple threads of technology come together to have a 1 + 1 = 7 effect! I think this is true for epigenome editing. We have known that we could do this since the early 2000s, but as you think about the ability to engineer new kind of proteins, both in terms of engaging the DNA and changing the epigenome, as we think about ways to rapidly profile their potency, do they do what we need them to do and how specific are they? Do they go somewhere else and turn some other genome?As we think about ways to deliver them to specific cells or organs in the body, all of that has not just undergone an incremental change in the past 20 years it has undergone a step change, where we can take a large animal, like a human primate, and inject it with a teaspoon of an epigenome editor formulated with a lipid nanoparticle (LNP). You inject it into the circulation of a monkey. And inside that LNP is an epigenome editor, engineered to turn off a gene that contributes to cardiovascular disease. Lo and behold, within a couple of weeks of administering this epi editor, the gene goes off.This is an amazing achievement, and the gene stays off for as long as the system has been looked at. We have always wanted to be able to tweak genes on and off—not just all the way on or off, but think of it as a soundboard, a bit more bass, a touch less treble, a bit more on the drums, and certainly less cowbell! This is what epigenome editing lets you do. It is like you can flip a gene on, you can flip a gene off, but you can also adjust it. Sound output… You don't need to change the DNA sequences. You simply inscribe new molecular makeup on that gene without changing what the DNA says and the gene politely obliges. That is the Spark Notes version.Is Tune Therapeutics the realization of a dream that started 25 years ago when you were a postdoc with the late Alan Wolffe?Urnov: Absolutely! Alan believed in epigenetics and chromatin as being the key to real insight into how human genes work before most people did. At the time in the 1990s, we knew chromatin existed, but people thought that chromatin gets out of the way so that the real action can begin. We now know that is not the case, but at the time it was not front and center in the minds of people working on gene control or people building therapies. Alan was remarkably ahead of his time in two ways. First, he just thought about chromatin as just incredibly deep, even though we did not know how deep the rabbit hole goes. Second, he was young. He passed away tragically in an accident in 2001 (age 42).His professional output over the previous 20 years was staggering. He was the youngest laboratory chief appointed to a chief of laboratory position at the NIH in its history. He wrote the definitive monograph on chromatin and epigenetics, which was on the table of everyone working in the field. And I will never forget the single most impactful conversation of my professional life, when Alan shows up at my bench in his laboratory in late 1999. Alan was English. He said, “Dr. Urnov, I have just had the most remarkable visit.” And he proceeded to describe the vision of engineering gene control using chromatin, epigenomic-based principles using a class of engineered proteins called zinc fingers.As far as I was concerned, Alan was Yoda except much younger. I could not believe my luck that I got to work in his laboratory. He described this vision and said, “There's a biotechnology company in Point Richmond, California.” I said, “That's amazing, Alan, thanks for telling me.” Six weeks later he calls me into his office and says, “Dr. Urnov, I have a question for you. How committed are you to a career in academia?” I remember thinking, he does not think I have it in me to be an academic scientist. What have I done? But Alan was inviting me to join him at Sangamo.A number of us went, it was the best professional move of my life. We had this extraordinary moment in 2001 where the field had just begun to realize what epigenetics could really do. And we had just begun to characterize these amazing molecular machines that inscribe epigenetic code. And to do the first experiments where we could bring in these epigenome modifiers, this was work by my colleague Philip Gregory, to endogenous human genes, and just instruct them by rewriting their epigenome.Philip would show the data at Sangamo meetings. I remember thinking, where is this going to go? Then in 2002, there were some articles on fruit flies and frogs from Dana Carroll at the University of Utah, and an article from David Baltimore's laboratory with Matt Porteus on targeted genetic engineering using the very same zinc fingers that we were using to change the epigenome. But then there was a severe adverse event in the gene therapy trial for bubble boy disease in France; 4 of 19 children developed cancer because the virus went into the wrong place [in the genome].There we were, in 2002. We have zinc fingers, which can let us get to a gene of interest. We have early evidence from flies, frogs, and reporter genes in human cells that we can create a double-strand break and repair a mutation, and we have this unmet need. We pivoted: It is not that we did not think that epigenome editing was exciting, but in terms of fixing a mutation for bubble boy disease, that felt real, like we could do this. So, we went after that. Now the rest is history, right? We got genetic editing to work. We named the technology, did all the first clinical trials, and of course we are about to get our first approved editing medicine using CRISPR-Cas technology.But all along, we were in Point Richmond, California, gene editing away. There was a hardy group of believers who never forgot that epigenome editing is a thing. And Charlie Gersbach (Duke University), my [Tune] cofounder, was one of those believers. He had his eye on that notion that you can inscribe epigenetic marks on genes, and he never took his eye off. I am very grateful to him. While everybody is running around making double-strand DNA breaks and creating interesting genetic forms, Charlie and some other academics thought this is all great, but we don't have to change the DNA to change what the genes do (Fig. 1).FIG. 1. How the epigenome controls gene expression.Epigenetic control elements are located along the length of each chromosome and alter local interactions between DNA and the histones. This keeps some genes coiled and inaccessible while opening up and making available others. These regulatory elements can alter chromatin structure by modifying histone proteins or DNA methylation and demethylation. This allows for the controlled activation or repression of genes across a wide range of cellular contexts and physiological states (Credit: Tune Therapeutics).About once a week, I see a scientific result where my first thought is, I wish Alan were alive to see this… When Tune showed the data that you can administer an epi editor to silence PCSK9 in the nonhuman primate with a durable effect, the first thought in my mind was, I wish Alan were alive to see this. I know exactly how he would have reacted. It is bittersweet.What sets Tune apart from other epigenome editing companies?Urnov: I love my field of targeted genetic and epigenetic engineering. We have a history of being a large rising tide that lifts all boats. It is a bit hard for me to say company #1 is better than company #2 because, for example, the people who have started at another epigenome editing company are some of my best professional friends. Rather, I would love to talk about what makes Tune strong, because as we have learned from a 30-year history of gene therapy, the more for-profit entities push technologies forward, the better we will get to learnings from clinical trials and preclinical development that gets us all to better platforms that become.What makes Tune strong are three things. I spent 16 years in industry. The only thing that matters with respect to ultimate success for a therapeutic: you can have a lot of money, amazing technology, and tremendous unmet need. But if you don't have the right people in the organization, it is going to fail. I think that the Tunesmiths, the melody makers, are some of the most impressive constellations of cross-functional expertise that I have ever seen.We have people who deeply understand how to engineer proteins, both in terms of routing them to specific positions in the DNA potently and specifically and in terms of what to fuse to them to create specific epi states. We have people with extraordinary skill in understanding how to read out at the cell biological level. Did we get the readout that is necessary? But all we have done so far is we have stayed in the same laboratory, right? We have built a protein that does something to a gene in a cell—that does not a therapeutic make (Fig. 2).FIG. 2. Gene expression volume control.Genetic tuning, or epigenetic editing, involves tinkering with epigenetic machinery in order to alter the expression of genes. Rather than completely activating or silencing a gene, genetic tuning allows for a much more nuanced range of effects. In certain contexts, a partial reduction or activation of gene expression is preferable to total knockout or forced over-expression. These distinctions are important to circumvent many of the technical and clinical barriers that have hindered the development of previous genomic therapeutics (Credit: Tune Therapeutics).I am so impressed with the vigor and vision with which Tune's leadership has been able to weave together a vertically integrated organization where pretty much at every station in the end-to-end journey of conceptualizing a target to then a disease therapeutic, and to then writing the target product profile, which is basically like, what are we treating? Using what? What is it going to do? What is the biological activity? What is the minimum approvable endpoint? What is the optimal problem from when you conceptualize target product profile for a disease indication too?When you flesh out the paths of attack of how you are going to deploy your platform, what you are going to need, what does the preclinical package look like, to actually doing all the relevant manufacturing tasks, and then taking it through regulatory and having the clinical perspective. I think the cross-functional team that Tune has built out is what makes it strong.Component number two is what these people have built. I am no stranger to impressive science, I have worked in organizations that know what they are doing. The Tune data are amazing. …We first met for a serious conversation about building Tune at a meeting. It was raining, so we were all glad to sit in the conference room in November in DC. And we sketched things out. I texted Charlie and said, well this has taken our dreams to reality and then some. I think the technology and the data that have come out of Tune—you feel parental, right? You teach your baby something and then you send them to college, and then you hold your breath and hope they write, but to have the report card come back and shine so brightly, that is strength number two.Strength number three is the following: We have cured every mouse on earth of every disease known to humankind. The only way to learn how to treat disease is to treat people with a disease. No amount of preclinical efficacy and safety data can teach you the key things you need to know in terms of how to actually build a medicine for that disease. So, I think Tune's strength is the clarity, vigor, and vision that leadership has managed to build and infuse the entire company with respect to a robust and healthy focus of getting Tune epi editors into the clinic.I have seen biotechnology companies perhaps too enamored of their preclinical experimentation. You have to get to human beings. I salute our leadership—seasoned professionals with scars of what can go wrong in the clinic—for the way they have been able to configure the organization toward having a very healthy and vibrant R&D pipeline while time pushing the company in a healthy way toward getting us into the clinic.References1. Urnov FD, Miller JC, Lee Y-L, et al. Highly efficient endogenous human gene correction using designed zinc-finger nucleases. Nature 2005;435(7042):646–651; doi: 10.1038/nature03556 Crossref, Medline, Google Scholar2. Urnov FD. Imagine CRISPR cures. Mol Ther 2021;29(11):3103–3106; doi: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2021.10.019 Crossref, Medline, Google Scholar3. Urnov F. Opinion | We Can Cure Disease by Editing a Person's DNA. Why Aren't We? The New York Times; 2022. Google ScholarFiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Volume 2Issue 5Oct 2023 InformationCopyright 2023, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishersTo cite this article:Fyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. Grinstein.Engineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor Urnov.GEN Biotechnology.Oct 2023.347-352.http://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduPublished in Volume: 2 Issue 5: October 16, 2023PDF download\",\"PeriodicalId\":73134,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"GEN biotechnology\",\"volume\":\"43 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-10-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"GEN biotechnology\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fdu\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"GEN biotechnology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fdu","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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创BiotechnologyVol。free AccessEngineering CRISPR Cures: a Interview with Fyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. GrinsteinFyodor D. Urnov*通讯地址:Fyodor D. Urnov, Innovative Genomics Institute翻译基因组学中心主任。电子邮件地址:[email protected]创新基因组学研究所转化基因组学中心主任。搜索本作者和Jonathan D. grinstein (GEN Media Group高级编辑)的更多论文。搜索本文作者的更多论文发表在线:2023年10月16日https://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduAboutSectionsPDF/EPUB权限& CitationsPermissionsDownload CitationsTrack CitationsAdd to favorites返回出版物共享共享onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Fyodor Urnov,创新基因组学研究所(IGI)转化基因组学中心主任Fyodor Urnov是基因组编辑领域的先驱,也是将crispr疗法的可用性和实用性扩展到尽可能广泛的人群中投入最多的科学家之一。他设想了一个基因组编辑可以治疗近4亿人的世界,这些人患有由基因突变引起的7000种疾病中的一种。1996年从布朗大学获得博士学位后,乌尔诺夫在美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)的艾伦·沃尔夫实验室担任博士后研究员。2000年,乌尔诺夫和沃尔夫一起搬到了加州的Sangamo Therapeutics。在Sangamo工作的16年里,乌尔诺夫和他的同事们在2005年首次演示了使用锌指核酸酶修饰人类细胞中的DNA,并在此过程中创造了“基因组编辑”一词。之后,乌尔诺夫领导的合作团队在作物遗传学、模型动物反向遗传学和人类体细胞遗传学方面创造了大规模的基因组编辑应用。在Sangamo期间,Urnov还领导了一个跨职能团队,从基础发现到最初设计镰状细胞病和-地中海贫血的首次人体临床试验,该团队正在与UCSF Benioff儿童医院和UCLA Broad干细胞研究中心合作进行。2019年,乌尔诺夫成为创新基因组学研究所(IGI)转化基因组学中心主任,与诺贝尔奖获得者詹妮弗·杜德纳(Jennifer Doudna)合作,并担任加州大学伯克利分校遗传学、基因组学和发展系教授。在IGI, Urnov与合作团队合作开发基于crispr的实验性治疗方法的首次人体应用,用于镰状细胞病(与Mark Walters, UCSF),免疫系统遗传疾病(与Alexander Marson, UCSF/IGI),辐射损伤(与Jonathan Weissman, MIT/Whitehead研究所),囊性纤维化(与Ross Wilson, IGI)和神经系统疾病(与Weill Neurohub和Roche/Genentech)。在这次独家采访中,GEN Biotechnology与乌尔诺夫谈论了他在基因组编辑方面的职业生涯,从他早期在Sangamo的工作,到他与查尔斯·格斯巴赫和松野彰(总裁兼首席财务官)共同创立的Tune Therapeutics公司。他详细阐述了他的“按需CRISPR治疗”计划,以及阻碍他实现目标的挑战。(考虑到篇幅和准确性,本文经过了轻微编辑。)我通读了你2021年在《分子疗法》(Molecular Therapy)上发表的文章(《想象一下CRISPR疗法》),我猜这篇文章参考了约翰·列侬(John Lennon)的歌曲,以及你2022年在《纽约时报》(New York Times)上发表的专栏文章(《我们可以通过编辑人的DNA来治愈疾病》)。为什么我们不是?”)在这些文章中,您列出了使CRISPR治疗n = 1疾病和罕见疾病成为现实所需的改进。在实现你的crispr按需治疗愿景方面,我们今天进展如何?乌尔诺夫:摆在我们面前的临床数据表明,基因疗法可以治愈严重疾病。这不是给定的。基因工程治疗疾病是1972年由加州大学圣地亚哥分校的泰德·弗里德曼提出的。那是50年前的事了!第一次基因治疗试验于1989年在美国国立卫生研究院进行。基因疗法能够起作用的曙光出现在本世纪头十年;CRISPR于2012年上线;2019年,首例人类接受了CRISPR治疗。回顾当时,我们很难想象,从1989年到2010年初这段早期的孵化期,一切都很顺利,有时也会出现故障。但后来这个领域取得了长足的进步,我们现在有15-20种基因疗法,仅仅是针对血液疾病,我们有相当惊人的疗效。我说的治愈,并不是指病人稍微好转。我的意思是像腺苷脱氨酶缺乏症,严重的综合免疫缺陷。唐·科恩(加州大学洛杉矶分校)和克莱尔·布斯(伦敦大学学院)有50个孩子肯定会死,他们基本上通过基因疗法治愈了,有两个病例通过骨髓移植治愈了。 我们早在21世纪初就知道我们可以做到这一点,但当你想到设计新型蛋白质的能力时,无论是在与DNA结合方面还是在改变表观基因组方面,当我们想到快速分析它们效力的方法时,它们是否能满足我们的需求,它们的特异性有多强?他们会去别的地方转化其他基因组吗?当我们考虑如何将它们输送到身体的特定细胞或器官时,在过去的20年里,所有这些都经历了一个渐进的变化,它经历了一个渐进的变化,我们可以把一个大型动物,比如人类灵长类动物,注射一茶匙由脂质纳米颗粒(LNP)配制的表观基因组编辑器。把它注射到猴子的血液循环中。LNP内部是一个表观基因组编辑器,用于关闭导致心血管疾病的基因。你瞧,在使用这种肾上腺素编辑器的几周内,基因就消失了。这是一个惊人的成就,只要这个系统被观察到,这个基因就不会出现。我们一直希望能够调整基因的开关,不仅仅是开或关,而是把它想象成一个音板,多一点低音,少一点高音,多一点鼓,当然少一点牛铃!这就是表观基因组编辑让你做的。就像你可以打开一个基因,也可以关闭一个基因,但你也可以调整它。声音输出,你不需要改变DNA序列。你只需在那个基因上加入新的分子组成,而不改变DNA的表达方式,基因就会礼貌地顺从。这是Spark Notes版本。25年前,当你还是已故艾伦·沃尔夫(Alan Wolffe)的博士后时,Tune Therapeutics实现了你的梦想吗?莫斯科:绝对!图灵相信表观遗传学和染色质是了解人类基因运作的关键。在20世纪90年代的时候,我们知道染色质的存在,但是人们认为染色质的存在是为了让真正的行动开始。我们现在知道情况并非如此,但在当时,它并不是研究基因控制或开发治疗方法的人们的首要和中心思想。图灵在两个方面明显领先于他的时代。首先,他只是认为染色质非常深,尽管我们不知道兔子洞有多深。其次,他很年轻。他在2001年的一次事故中不幸去世(42岁)。在过去的20年里,他的专业产出是惊人的。他是NIH历史上被任命为实验室主任的最年轻的实验室主任。他写了关于染色质和表观遗传学的权威专著,这是在这个领域工作的每个人的桌子上。我永远不会忘记我职业生涯中最具影响力的一次对话,1999年底,艾伦出现在他实验室的长椅上。艾伦是英国人。他说:“乌尔诺夫医生,我刚刚经历了一次非常了不起的拜访。”他接着描述了利用染色质,表观基因组学原理,利用一种叫做锌指的工程蛋白来控制基因工程的前景。在我看来,艾伦就是尤达,只不过年轻得多。我简直不敢相信自己的运气能在他的实验室工作。他描述了这个愿景,说:“在加州的里士满角有一家生物技术公司。”我说:“太棒了,艾伦,谢谢你告诉我。”六周后,他把我叫到他的办公室,对我说:“乌尔诺夫博士,我有个问题要问你。你对学术事业有多投入?”我记得我当时在想,他认为我没有能力成为一名学术科学家。我做了什么?但艾伦邀请我去桑加莫。我们中的很多人都去了,这是我一生中最专业的一次搬家。我们在2001年经历了一个非凡的时刻,这个领域刚刚开始意识到表观遗传学的真正作用。我们刚刚开始描述这些神奇的分子机器,它们刻着表观遗传密码。我的同事菲利普·格雷戈里(Philip Gregory)对内源性人类基因进行了第一次实验,在实验中我们引入了这些表观基因组修饰因子,并通过重写表观基因组来指导它们。菲利普会在Sangamo会议上展示这些数据。我记得我在想,这将会怎样?然后在2002年,有一些关于果蝇和青蛙的文章来自于犹他大学的Dana Carroll,还有一篇来自David Baltimore和Matt Porteus的实验室的文章是关于目标基因工程的,使用的正是我们用来改变表观基因组的锌指。但是在法国泡泡男孩病的基因治疗试验中出现了严重的不良事件;19名儿童中有4名患了癌症,因为病毒进入了[基因组中的]错误位置。这就是2002年的情况。我们有锌指,可以让我们找到感兴趣的基因。
Engineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor Urnov
GEN BiotechnologyVol. 2, No. 5 Asked & AnsweredFree AccessEngineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor UrnovFyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. GrinsteinFyodor D. Urnov*Address correspondence to: Fyodor D. Urnov, Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute. E-mail Address: [email protected]Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute.Search for more papers by this author and Jonathan D. GrinsteinSenior Editor, GEN Media Group.Search for more papers by this authorPublished Online:16 Oct 2023https://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduAboutSectionsPDF/EPUB Permissions & CitationsPermissionsDownload CitationsTrack CitationsAdd to favorites Back To Publication ShareShare onFacebookTwitterLinked InRedditEmail Fyodor Urnov, Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI)Fyodor Urnov is a pioneer in the field of genome editing and one of the scientists most invested in expanding the availability and utility of CRISPR-based therapies to the broadest possible population. He envisions a world in which genome editing can treat the nearly 400 million people who are suffering from one of the 7000 diseases brought on by gene mutations.After his PhD in 1996 from Brown University, Urnov worked as a postdoctoral fellow in the laboratory of Alan Wolffe at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). In 2000, Urnov joined Wolffe in moving to Sangamo Therapeutics in California. During his 16 years at Sangamo, Urnov and his colleagues performed the first demonstration using zinc-finger nucleases to modify DNA in human cells in 2005, coining the term “genome editing” in the process.1After that, Urnov led collaborative teams that created large-scale genome editing applications in crop genetics, model animal reverse genetics, and human somatic cell genetics. While at Sangamo, Urnov also led a cross-functional team from basic discovery to the initial design of the first-in-human clinical trials for sickle cell disease and beta-thalassemia, which are being conducted in collaboration with UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital and UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center.In 2019, Urnov became the Director of the Center for Translational Genomics at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI), working alongside Nobel laureate Jennifer Doudna, and a Professor in the Departments of Genetics, Genomics, and Development at the University of California, Berkeley. At the IGI, Urnov works in collaborative teams to develop first-in-human applications of experimental CRISPR-based therapeutics for sickle cell disease (with Mark Walters, UCSF), genetic disorders of the immune system (with Alexander Marson, UCSF/IGI), radiation injury (with Jonathan Weissman, MIT/Whitehead Institute), cystic fibrosis (with Ross Wilson, IGI), and neurological disorders (with Weill Neurohub and Roche/Genentech).In this exclusive interview, GEN Biotechnology talks to Urnov about his career in genome editing, from his early days at Sangamo to the establishment of his current company, Tune Therapeutics, which he cofounded with Charles Gersbach and Akira Matsuno (president and CFO). He elaborates on his plans for “CRISPR cures on demand” and the challenges that stand in the way of his goal.(This interview has been lightly edited for length and accuracy.)I read through your 2021 article for Molecular Therapy (“Imagine CRISPR Cures”),2 which I am guessing is a reference to the John Lennon song, and your 2022 op-ed for the New York Times (“We Can Cure Disease by Editing a Person's DNA. Why Aren't We?”).3 In those articles, you lay out the improvements necessary to make CRISPR cures for n = 1 diseases and rare diseases a reality. Where are we today in realizing your CRISPR-cure-on-demand vision?Urnov: We have in front of us clinical data that genetic therapies for severe disease can be curative. This wasn't a given. Genetic engineering to treat disease was proposed in 1972 by Ted Friedman at UCSD. That's 50 years ago! The first gene therapy trials were done at the NIH in 1989. The first glimmers that gene therapy can work came in the 2000s; CRISPR came online in 2012; the first human was treated with CRISPR in 2019. Looking back at that time, it staggers the imagination how this early period of incubation—1989 through the early 2010s—where things were sort of working, sometimes there are glitches. But then the field hit its stride and we now have on the order of 15–20 gene therapies just for disorders of the blood alone, where we have pretty spectacular curative effects.And when I say curative, I don't mean a patient gets mildly better. I mean something like adenosine deaminase deficiency, severe combined immune deficiency. Don Kohn (UCLA) and Claire Booth (University College London) had 50 children who were certain to die, and they are basically cured by gene therapy or in two cases by bone marrow transplant. Think about that!Similarly, as one looks at what CRISPR has been doing clinically, look at the data from clinical trials for sickle cell disease from CRISPR Therapeutics and Vertex Pharmaceuticals. They have treated people who have had multiple episodes of pain before being administered their own CRISPR-edited cells. And they have shown that dozens of human beings are now free of pain episodes (in the case of sickle) or need for transfusion. Or look at Intellia, which is treating ATTR amyloidosis; within a month of being administered a teaspoon of CRISPR—it is astonishing. You have 95% reduction in the bloodstream of these human beings of this toxic protein. So, blood is editable, the liver is editable. Major companies, biotech and pharma, are showing how well it works.Nobody is celebrating this in the rare disease space because the rare diseases under the current system are just going to be left by the roadside. There are just not enough human beings with, say, rare disease number 75 out of 5000 to justify the commercial investment in taking that medicine through development, clinical trials then regulatory approval… We have examples where companies took on genetic therapies that they simply could not figure out how to commercialize… There are 17 diseases where lentiviral gene therapy was curative, the list is growing—but only four of them are commercialized.For about three of the others, commercialization has been halted and none of the recent ones are being commercialized. So as Kohn says, the list of diseases we have cured is growing at the bottom and the list of diseases that are commercialized and approved is shrinking from the top.The realization that CRISPR can be this powerful is now a definitive component of the momentum that the system has to change. I am unaware, unfortunately, of a single gene-editing trial anywhere in the world for genetic disease that will be all academic and all nonprofit—other than the one we have, which is led by Mark Walters (University of California, San Francisco). It gives me zero pleasure to say that we are the only ones. There should be literally 100 trials such as this—the patients are out there and the technology is there. So, as we think about getting closer to a world where these diseases are not left by the wayside, we are probably 20% of the way in. I will also say that the remaining 80% are going to be more challenging than the first 20%.The first 20% of the way that we are in basically shows that academic and nonprofit centers have all the relevant expertise to design a CRISPR medicine, to administer it to animals, and in a few cases really get the program to a point where, if only we could manufacture the medicine affordably, if only we could go through clinical trials affordably, if only there was a regulatory framework where we would not be burdened by studies that are millions of dollars and years in length, which is what currently the costs are.The next 3–5 years, I see as almost a moral must for our field. We have to take the momentum that CRISPR can be curative, that gene therapy can be curative. We have to take the established fact that there are academic and nonprofit institutions across the world with CRISPR expertise. I am sitting in the center of one of them (UC Berkeley); our sister campus at UCSF is a world leader in developing these therapies.Our sister campus, UCLA, is another leader. We at UC Berkeley are a CRISPR center of excellence. There are other places like that, Children's Hospital Boston, Penn Medicine, Seattle Children's, St. Jude. What currently does not exist is a way to support these institutions and create a dedicated manufacturing and regulatory framework for them where, within the realm of academic nonprofit medicine, they can start rapidly developing, de-risking and administering these cures for n = 1.Why don't we have that? Well, we have never had a technology as versatile as CRISPR. In other words, the reason that there is not some sort of wonderful environment where you can develop and deliver a CRISPR cure in 6 months is we have never had a reason to build it! Now we do. The momentum to have the regulatory manufacturing and logistical and clinical environments now aligned with the promise of the technology comes from the fact that the technology has demonstrated definitive curative potential.You are the cofounder of a biotech company called Tune Therapeutics. Can you give us the Spark Notes summary of epigenome editing? What can epigenetic editing do that base and prime editing cannot? If it is not a one-and-done treatment, why would you go this route as opposed to using a genetic tool like CRISPR for permanent changes?Urnov: I really hope you booked 3 hours for this interview!Why does fiber protect from colon cancer? It is because, in your colon, the fiber gets fermented to make a chemical called sodium butyrate, which enters the cells of the lining of the colon, and it changes chemical marks on genes that protect those colon cells from cancer. Those marks on the protein coating of the genes and on the DNA, itself don't change what the genes say, those marks change what the genes do.So next time you have some oatmeal, close your eyes, and visualize that fiber being fermented in your colon, making butyrate and the butyrate entering the cells that line your colon entering the nucleus and that chemical keeping the genes that protect you from cancer on. First of all, fiber is good for you, both for cardiovascular disease and colorectal health. This is a great example of how our genes learned from experience because that is literally what epigenetics is. Yes, we leave this mortal coil with more or less the same DNA that we are born with, but what our genes do in our lifetime changes, not just because we age, but because we go through various exposures. We know from striking public health evidence how powerful keeping a healthy epigenome can be.In the United States and many developed countries, if a woman chooses to become pregnant, her physician will recommend that she takes a dietary supplement called folate. Folate is less interesting than what it does. It allows the developing fetus to have a healthy epigenome specifically in its spine. It prevents the prevalence of spina bifida. And there is definitive epidemiological evidence that dietary folate in a woman who chooses to have a biological child before conception and through pregnancy will keep the genes in the developing fetus and the baby that contribute to normal spine development in a healthy state…So, the epigenome is the sum total of these little marks from experience that our genes acquire as we go through development and life. We have known about this since the 1960s, we have known that our DNA is enveloped in proteins that have these chemical marks, and those marks have something to do with what the genes do.But until about 20 years ago, we were like astronomers staring at the stars, right? We can count them, but we cannot fly to them. Then about 20 years ago, some really amazing work that came out of a number of academic institutions and then ultimately got taken up by a technology company [Sangamo] where I have to disclose an emotional conflict of interest—I worked there for a decade and a half! You can engineer proteins that will recognize a specific gene inside a living cell and change its epigenome. What does that mean in practical terms? Imagine a gene that apparently got silenced for some reason of environmental exposure. Maybe we can wake it. Imagine a gene that is producing something unwanted; maybe we can build a protein that would engage that gene and turn it off.We don't have to imagine—this is all reality. Studies for the past 20 years have given us a proof of concept that you can turn genes on and off on demand. We need not wait for Mother Nature to smile benevolently on us, we can turn genes on and off on demand by building these epigenome editors. Notice the epi prefix: they are not gene editors, they don't change the DNA; they change what the genes do. An epigenome editor can go inside a T cell or a brain cell and turn a specific gene on and off. I want to emphasize that we humans have a great ability of proposing technologies and then getting it to work as a proof of concept, and then other technologies come on board and ultimately, it is the constellation of things that makes things real.My favorite example is the surface of the iPhone, made out of something called gorilla glass, which Corning engineered in the 1960s for use in windshields. It never caught on and sat on the shelf until Steve Jobs decided that he wanted to make his iPhone with an unbreakable glass cover. It is a great example of how multiple threads of technology come together to have a 1 + 1 = 7 effect! I think this is true for epigenome editing. We have known that we could do this since the early 2000s, but as you think about the ability to engineer new kind of proteins, both in terms of engaging the DNA and changing the epigenome, as we think about ways to rapidly profile their potency, do they do what we need them to do and how specific are they? Do they go somewhere else and turn some other genome?As we think about ways to deliver them to specific cells or organs in the body, all of that has not just undergone an incremental change in the past 20 years it has undergone a step change, where we can take a large animal, like a human primate, and inject it with a teaspoon of an epigenome editor formulated with a lipid nanoparticle (LNP). You inject it into the circulation of a monkey. And inside that LNP is an epigenome editor, engineered to turn off a gene that contributes to cardiovascular disease. Lo and behold, within a couple of weeks of administering this epi editor, the gene goes off.This is an amazing achievement, and the gene stays off for as long as the system has been looked at. We have always wanted to be able to tweak genes on and off—not just all the way on or off, but think of it as a soundboard, a bit more bass, a touch less treble, a bit more on the drums, and certainly less cowbell! This is what epigenome editing lets you do. It is like you can flip a gene on, you can flip a gene off, but you can also adjust it. Sound output… You don't need to change the DNA sequences. You simply inscribe new molecular makeup on that gene without changing what the DNA says and the gene politely obliges. That is the Spark Notes version.Is Tune Therapeutics the realization of a dream that started 25 years ago when you were a postdoc with the late Alan Wolffe?Urnov: Absolutely! Alan believed in epigenetics and chromatin as being the key to real insight into how human genes work before most people did. At the time in the 1990s, we knew chromatin existed, but people thought that chromatin gets out of the way so that the real action can begin. We now know that is not the case, but at the time it was not front and center in the minds of people working on gene control or people building therapies. Alan was remarkably ahead of his time in two ways. First, he just thought about chromatin as just incredibly deep, even though we did not know how deep the rabbit hole goes. Second, he was young. He passed away tragically in an accident in 2001 (age 42).His professional output over the previous 20 years was staggering. He was the youngest laboratory chief appointed to a chief of laboratory position at the NIH in its history. He wrote the definitive monograph on chromatin and epigenetics, which was on the table of everyone working in the field. And I will never forget the single most impactful conversation of my professional life, when Alan shows up at my bench in his laboratory in late 1999. Alan was English. He said, “Dr. Urnov, I have just had the most remarkable visit.” And he proceeded to describe the vision of engineering gene control using chromatin, epigenomic-based principles using a class of engineered proteins called zinc fingers.As far as I was concerned, Alan was Yoda except much younger. I could not believe my luck that I got to work in his laboratory. He described this vision and said, “There's a biotechnology company in Point Richmond, California.” I said, “That's amazing, Alan, thanks for telling me.” Six weeks later he calls me into his office and says, “Dr. Urnov, I have a question for you. How committed are you to a career in academia?” I remember thinking, he does not think I have it in me to be an academic scientist. What have I done? But Alan was inviting me to join him at Sangamo.A number of us went, it was the best professional move of my life. We had this extraordinary moment in 2001 where the field had just begun to realize what epigenetics could really do. And we had just begun to characterize these amazing molecular machines that inscribe epigenetic code. And to do the first experiments where we could bring in these epigenome modifiers, this was work by my colleague Philip Gregory, to endogenous human genes, and just instruct them by rewriting their epigenome.Philip would show the data at Sangamo meetings. I remember thinking, where is this going to go? Then in 2002, there were some articles on fruit flies and frogs from Dana Carroll at the University of Utah, and an article from David Baltimore's laboratory with Matt Porteus on targeted genetic engineering using the very same zinc fingers that we were using to change the epigenome. But then there was a severe adverse event in the gene therapy trial for bubble boy disease in France; 4 of 19 children developed cancer because the virus went into the wrong place [in the genome].There we were, in 2002. We have zinc fingers, which can let us get to a gene of interest. We have early evidence from flies, frogs, and reporter genes in human cells that we can create a double-strand break and repair a mutation, and we have this unmet need. We pivoted: It is not that we did not think that epigenome editing was exciting, but in terms of fixing a mutation for bubble boy disease, that felt real, like we could do this. So, we went after that. Now the rest is history, right? We got genetic editing to work. We named the technology, did all the first clinical trials, and of course we are about to get our first approved editing medicine using CRISPR-Cas technology.But all along, we were in Point Richmond, California, gene editing away. There was a hardy group of believers who never forgot that epigenome editing is a thing. And Charlie Gersbach (Duke University), my [Tune] cofounder, was one of those believers. He had his eye on that notion that you can inscribe epigenetic marks on genes, and he never took his eye off. I am very grateful to him. While everybody is running around making double-strand DNA breaks and creating interesting genetic forms, Charlie and some other academics thought this is all great, but we don't have to change the DNA to change what the genes do (Fig. 1).FIG. 1. How the epigenome controls gene expression.Epigenetic control elements are located along the length of each chromosome and alter local interactions between DNA and the histones. This keeps some genes coiled and inaccessible while opening up and making available others. These regulatory elements can alter chromatin structure by modifying histone proteins or DNA methylation and demethylation. This allows for the controlled activation or repression of genes across a wide range of cellular contexts and physiological states (Credit: Tune Therapeutics).About once a week, I see a scientific result where my first thought is, I wish Alan were alive to see this… When Tune showed the data that you can administer an epi editor to silence PCSK9 in the nonhuman primate with a durable effect, the first thought in my mind was, I wish Alan were alive to see this. I know exactly how he would have reacted. It is bittersweet.What sets Tune apart from other epigenome editing companies?Urnov: I love my field of targeted genetic and epigenetic engineering. We have a history of being a large rising tide that lifts all boats. It is a bit hard for me to say company #1 is better than company #2 because, for example, the people who have started at another epigenome editing company are some of my best professional friends. Rather, I would love to talk about what makes Tune strong, because as we have learned from a 30-year history of gene therapy, the more for-profit entities push technologies forward, the better we will get to learnings from clinical trials and preclinical development that gets us all to better platforms that become.What makes Tune strong are three things. I spent 16 years in industry. The only thing that matters with respect to ultimate success for a therapeutic: you can have a lot of money, amazing technology, and tremendous unmet need. But if you don't have the right people in the organization, it is going to fail. I think that the Tunesmiths, the melody makers, are some of the most impressive constellations of cross-functional expertise that I have ever seen.We have people who deeply understand how to engineer proteins, both in terms of routing them to specific positions in the DNA potently and specifically and in terms of what to fuse to them to create specific epi states. We have people with extraordinary skill in understanding how to read out at the cell biological level. Did we get the readout that is necessary? But all we have done so far is we have stayed in the same laboratory, right? We have built a protein that does something to a gene in a cell—that does not a therapeutic make (Fig. 2).FIG. 2. Gene expression volume control.Genetic tuning, or epigenetic editing, involves tinkering with epigenetic machinery in order to alter the expression of genes. Rather than completely activating or silencing a gene, genetic tuning allows for a much more nuanced range of effects. In certain contexts, a partial reduction or activation of gene expression is preferable to total knockout or forced over-expression. These distinctions are important to circumvent many of the technical and clinical barriers that have hindered the development of previous genomic therapeutics (Credit: Tune Therapeutics).I am so impressed with the vigor and vision with which Tune's leadership has been able to weave together a vertically integrated organization where pretty much at every station in the end-to-end journey of conceptualizing a target to then a disease therapeutic, and to then writing the target product profile, which is basically like, what are we treating? Using what? What is it going to do? What is the biological activity? What is the minimum approvable endpoint? What is the optimal problem from when you conceptualize target product profile for a disease indication too?When you flesh out the paths of attack of how you are going to deploy your platform, what you are going to need, what does the preclinical package look like, to actually doing all the relevant manufacturing tasks, and then taking it through regulatory and having the clinical perspective. I think the cross-functional team that Tune has built out is what makes it strong.Component number two is what these people have built. I am no stranger to impressive science, I have worked in organizations that know what they are doing. The Tune data are amazing. …We first met for a serious conversation about building Tune at a meeting. It was raining, so we were all glad to sit in the conference room in November in DC. And we sketched things out. I texted Charlie and said, well this has taken our dreams to reality and then some. I think the technology and the data that have come out of Tune—you feel parental, right? You teach your baby something and then you send them to college, and then you hold your breath and hope they write, but to have the report card come back and shine so brightly, that is strength number two.Strength number three is the following: We have cured every mouse on earth of every disease known to humankind. The only way to learn how to treat disease is to treat people with a disease. No amount of preclinical efficacy and safety data can teach you the key things you need to know in terms of how to actually build a medicine for that disease. So, I think Tune's strength is the clarity, vigor, and vision that leadership has managed to build and infuse the entire company with respect to a robust and healthy focus of getting Tune epi editors into the clinic.I have seen biotechnology companies perhaps too enamored of their preclinical experimentation. You have to get to human beings. I salute our leadership—seasoned professionals with scars of what can go wrong in the clinic—for the way they have been able to configure the organization toward having a very healthy and vibrant R&D pipeline while time pushing the company in a healthy way toward getting us into the clinic.References1. Urnov FD, Miller JC, Lee Y-L, et al. Highly efficient endogenous human gene correction using designed zinc-finger nucleases. Nature 2005;435(7042):646–651; doi: 10.1038/nature03556 Crossref, Medline, Google Scholar2. Urnov FD. Imagine CRISPR cures. Mol Ther 2021;29(11):3103–3106; doi: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2021.10.019 Crossref, Medline, Google Scholar3. Urnov F. Opinion | We Can Cure Disease by Editing a Person's DNA. Why Aren't We? The New York Times; 2022. Google ScholarFiguresReferencesRelatedDetails Volume 2Issue 5Oct 2023 InformationCopyright 2023, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishersTo cite this article:Fyodor D. Urnov and Jonathan D. Grinstein.Engineering CRISPR Cures: An Interview with Fyodor Urnov.GEN Biotechnology.Oct 2023.347-352.http://doi.org/10.1089/genbio.2023.29113.fduPublished in Volume: 2 Issue 5: October 16, 2023PDF download