Scimex: UNSW Australia researchers have shown that changing just a single 
letter of the DNA of human red blood cells in the laboratory increases 
their production of oxygen-carrying haemoglobin – a world-first advance 
that could lead to a cure for sickle cell anaemia and other blood 
disorders. The new genome editing technique, in which a 
beneficial, naturally-occurring genetic mutation is introduced into 
cells, works by switching on a sleeping gene that is active in the womb 
but turned off in most people after birth."An exciting new age of
 genome editing is beginning, now that single genes within our vast 
genome can be precisely cut and repaired," says study leader, Dean of 
Science at UNSW, Professor Merlin Crossley.
"Our laboratory study 
provides a proof of concept that changing just one letter of DNA in a 
gene could alleviate the symptoms of sickle cell anaemia and 
thalassaemia – inherited diseases in which people have damaged 
haemoglobin.
"Because the good genetic variation we introduced 
already exists in nature, this approach should be effective and safe. 
However more research is needed before it can be tested in people as a 
possible cure for serious blood diseases."
The study, by Professor Crossley, UNSW PhD student Beeke Wienert, and colleagues, is published in the journal Nature Communications.
People
 produce two different kinds of haemoglobin – the vital molecule that 
picks up oxygen in the lungs and transports it around the body.
"During
 development in the womb, the foetal haemoglobin gene is switched on. 
This produces foetal haemoglobin, which has a high affinity for oxygen, 
allowing the baby to snatch oxygen from its mother's blood," says 
Professor Crossley.
"After we are born, the foetal haemoglobin gene is shut off and the adult haemoglobin gene is switched on."
Mutations
 affecting adult haemoglobin are among the most common of all human 
genetic mutations, with about five per cent of the world's population 
carrying a defective adult haemoglobin gene.
People who inherit 
two mutant genes – one from their mother and one from their father – 
have damaged haemoglobin and suffer from life-threatening diseases such 
as sickle cell anaemia and thalassaemia, which require life-long 
treatment with blood transfusions and medication.
The researchers 
based their new approach on the fact that a small number of people with 
damaged adult haemoglobin have an additional, beneficial mutation in the
 foetal haemoglobin gene.
"This good mutation keeps their foetal 
haemoglobin gene switched on for the whole of their lives, and reduces 
their symptoms significantly," says Professor Crossley.
The 
researchers introduced this single-letter mutation into human red blood 
cells using genome-editing proteins known as TALENs, which can be 
designed to cut a gene at a specific point, as well as providing the 
desired piece of donor DNA for insertion.
"Breaks in DNA can be 
lethal to cells, so they have in-built machinery to repair any nicks as 
soon as possible, by grabbing any spare DNA that seems to match – much 
like you might darn a red sock with any spare red wool lying around," 
says Professor Crossley.
"We exploited this effect. When our 
genome editing protein cuts the DNA, the cell quickly replaces it with 
the donor DNA that we have also provided."
The team includes 
researchers from UNSW, the University of Sydney, the University of 
Melbourne, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, and Stanford 
University.
If the genome-editing technique is shown to work 
effectively in blood stem cells and be safe, it would offer significant 
advantages over other approaches, such as conventional gene therapy, in 
which viruses are used to ferry healthy genes into a cell to replace the
 defective ones.
The genetic changes to cells would not be 
inherited, making the approach very different to recent controversial 
Chinese research in which the DNA of human embryos was altered.
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