2020 Apr 15;29(6):990-1001.
 doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddaa023.

Correction of ATM mutations in iPS cells from two ataxia-telangiectasia patients restores DNA damage and oxidative stress responses

Affiliations 

Affiliations

  • 1Australian Institute for Bioengineering and Nanotechnology (AIBN), The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia.
  • 2StemCore, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia.
  • 3UQ Centre for Clinical Research (UQCCR), The University of Queensland, Herston, Brisbane, QLD 4006, Australia.
    • PMID: 32037450

 

Abstract

Patients with ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) lack a functional ATM kinase protein and exhibit defective repair of DNA double-stranded breaks and response to oxidative stress. We show that CRISPR/Cas9-assisted gene correction combined with piggyBac (PB) transposon-mediated excision of the selection cassette enables seamless restoration of functional ATM alleles in induced pluripotent stem cells from an A-T patient carrying compound heterozygous exonic missense/frameshift mutations, and from a patient with a homozygous splicing acceptor mutation of an internal coding exon. We show that the correction of one allele restores expression of ~ 50% of full-length ATM protein and ameliorates DNA damage-induced activation (auto-phosphorylation) of ATM and phosphorylation of its downstream targets, KAP-1 and H2AX. Restoration of ATM function also normalizes radiosensitivity, mitochondrial ROS production and oxidative-stress-induced apoptosis levels in A-T iPSC lines, demonstrating that restoration of a single ATM allele is sufficient to rescue key ATM functions. Our data further show that despite the absence of a functional ATM kinase, homology-directed repair and seamless correction of a pathogenic ATM mutation is possible. The isogenic pairs of A-T and gene-corrected iPSCs described here constitute valuable tools for elucidating the role of ATM in ageing and A-T pathogenesis.