16 January 2026, 11:00
Toward clinical translation of targeted epigenetic manipulation: optimizing epigenetic editing platforms for in vivo silencing of therapeutically relevant genes.
Description AbstractEpigenome editing EE i e the targeted modulation of gene expression without altering the underlying DNA sequence offers a promising therapeutic strategy for silencing disease associated genes For most clinical applications an optimal EE platform should deliver robust specific and durable gene repression following only transient expression of the epi editor To demonstrate the feasibility of this approach we engineered optimized and screened a series of evolved epi editors Specifically we systematically refined i the DNA binding domain targeting the murine Pcsk9 locus ii the composition and configuration of epigenetically active effector domains and iii a liver targeted non viral delivery system After extensive optimization a single transient administration of the evolved epi editor in mice yielded long lasting 300 days and potent repression of circulating Pcsk9 levels up to 70 Genome wide specificity profiling showed extensive methylation at the Pcsk9 promoter with minimal effects on other loci demonstrating that epi editors can be engineered for high specificity Collectively these findings provide the first in vivo proof of concept for hit and run epigenetic editing Building on this foundation we are now working to further evolve epi editors and expand the applicability of EE to previously inaccessible tissues and disease contexts... AbstractEpigenome editing (EE), i.e. the targeted modulation of gene expression without altering the underlying DNA sequence, offers a promising therapeutic strategy for silencing disease-associated genes. For most clinical applications, an optimal EE platform should deliver robust, specific, and durable gene repression following only transient expression of the epi-editor. To demonstrate the feasibility of this approach, we engineered, optimized, and screened a series of evolved epi-editors. Specifically, we systematically refined: (i) the DNA-binding domain targeting the murine Pcsk9 locus; (ii) the composition and configuration of epigenetically active effector domains; and (iii) a liver-targeted non-viral delivery system. After extensive optimization, a single transient administration of the evolved epi-editor in mice yielded long-lasting (>300 days) and potent repression of...
Speaker(s): Martino Cappelluti, San Raffaele Telethon Institute for Gene Therapy (SR-Tiget), Italy
Host: Jamie Hackett
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Rome
Additional information
Abstract
Epigenome editing (EE), i.e. the targeted modulation of gene expression without altering the underlying DNA sequence, offers a promising therapeutic strategy for silencing disease-associated genes. For most clinical applications, an optimal EE platform should deliver robust, specific, and durable gene repression following only transient expression of the epi-editor. To demonstrate the feasibility of this approach, we engineered, optimized, and screened a series of evolved epi-editors. Specifically, we systematically refined: (i) the DNA-binding domain targeting the murine Pcsk9 locus; (ii) the composition and configuration of epigenetically active effector domains; and (iii) a liver-targeted non-viral delivery system. After extensive optimization, a single transient administration of the evolved epi-editor in mice yielded long-lasting (>300 days) and potent repression of circulating Pcsk9 levels (up to −70%). Genome-wide specificity profiling showed extensive methylation at the Pcsk9 promoter with minimal effects on other loci, demonstrating that epi-editors can be engineered for high specificity. Collectively, these findings provide the first in vivo proof-of-concept for “hit-and-run” epigenetic editing. Building on this foundation, we are now working to further evolve epi-editors and expand the applicability of EE to previously inaccessible tissues and disease contexts.