Enhanced Calvarial Bone Repair Using ASCs Engineered with RNA‐Guided Split dCas12a System that Co‐Activates Sox 5, Sox6, and Long Non‐Coding RNA H19

Author:

Nguyen Nuong Thi Kieu1,Lee Shang‐Shung1,Chen Pin‐Hsin1,Chang Yi‐Hao1,Pham Nam Ngoc1,Chang Chin‐Wei1,Pham Dang Huu1,Ngo Dung Kim Thi1,Dang Quyen Thuc1,Truong Vy Anh1,Truong Vu Anh1,Chang Yu‐Han2,Hu Yu‐Chen13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemical Engineering National Tsing Hua University Hsinchu 300044 Taiwan

2. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Bone and Joint Research Center Chang Gung Memorial Hospital Linkou 33305 Taiwan

3. Frontier Research Center on Fundamental and Applied Sciences of Matters National Tsing Hua University Hsinchu 300044 Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractHealing of large calvarial bone defects remains challenging. An RNA‐guided Split dCas12a system is previously harnessed to activate long non‐coding RNA H19 (lncRNA H19, referred to as H19 thereafter) in bone marrow‐derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs). H19 activation in BMSCs induces chondrogenic differentiation, switches bone healing pathways, and improves calvarial bone repair. Since adipose‐derived stem cells (ASCs) can be harvested more easily in large quantity, here it is aimed to use ASCs as an alternative cell source. However, H19 activation alone using the Split dCas12a system in ASCs failed to elicit evident chondrogenesis. Therefore, split dCas12a activators are designed more to co‐activate other chondroinductive transcription factors (Sox5, Sox6, and Sox9) to synergistically potentiate differentiation. It is found that co‐activation of H19/Sox5/Sox6 in ASCs elicited more potent chondrogenic differentiation than activation of Sox5/Sox6/Sox9 or H19 alone. Co‐activating H19/Sox5/Sox6 in ASCs significantly augmented in vitro cartilage formation and in vivo calvarial bone healing. These data altogether implicated the potentials of the Split dCas12a system to trigger multiplexed gene activation in ASCs for differentiation pathway reprogramming and tissue regeneration.

Funder

National Science and Technology Council

Chang Gung Memorial Hospital

National Health Research Institutes

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Biomaterials,Biotechnology,General Materials Science,General Chemistry

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