Pathological modeling of glycogen storage disease type III with CRISPR/Cas9 edited human pluripotent stem cells

Front Cell Dev Biol. 2023 May 11:11:1163427. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1163427. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Glycogen storage disease type III (GSDIII) is a rare genetic disease caused by mutations in the AGL gene encoding the glycogen debranching enzyme (GDE). The deficiency of this enzyme, involved in cytosolic glycogen degradation, leads to pathological glycogen accumulation in liver, skeletal muscles and heart. Although the disease manifests with hypoglycemia and liver metabolism impairment, the progressive myopathy is the major disease burden in adult GSDIII patients, without any curative treatment currently available. Methods: Here, we combined the self-renewal and differentiation capabilities of human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) with cutting edge CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing technology to establish a stable AGL knockout cell line and to explore glycogen metabolism in GSDIII. Results: Following skeletal muscle cells differentiation of the edited and control hiPSC lines, our study reports that the insertion of a frameshift mutation in AGL gene results in the loss of GDE expression and persistent glycogen accumulation under glucose starvation conditions. Phenotypically, we demonstrated that the edited skeletal muscle cells faithfully recapitulate the phenotype of differentiated skeletal muscle cells of hiPSCs derived from a GSDIII patient. We also demonstrated that treatment with recombinant AAV vectors expressing the human GDE cleared the accumulated glycogen. Discussion: This study describes the first skeletal muscle cell model of GSDIII derived from hiPSCs and establishes a platform to study the mechanisms that contribute to muscle impairments in GSDIII and to assess the therapeutic potential of pharmacological inducers of glycogen degradation or gene therapy approaches.

Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; glycogen storage disease; induced pluripotent stem cell; muscular disorders; skeletal muscle cell.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by grants from La Fondation Maladies Rares through the program Identifying therapeutic molecules for rare diseases, from the French National Research Agency (ANR-22-CE17-0031), from INSERM, the domaine d’intéret majeur (DIM) Biothérapies, Genopole, the European Commission: the laboratoire d’Excellence Revive and NeurATRIS: A Translational Research Infrastructure for Biotherapies in Neurosciences. This research also benefited from the financial support of the Association Francophone des Glycogénoses (AFG). LR is recipient of a doctoral fellowship from Genethon and AG is recipient of a “Poste d’Accueil INSERM” doctoral fellowship. I-Stem and Genethon are part of the Biotherapies Institute for Rare Diseases (BIRD), supported by the Association Française contre les Myopathies (AFM-Téléthon).