CRISPR/Cas9 and iPSC-Based Therapeutic Approaches in Alzheimer’s Disease
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. CRISPR-Based Gene Editing in AD: Target Genes, Therapeutic Potential, and Challenges
2.1. Mechanism of CRISPR/Cas9
2.2. Gene-Editing Potential of CRISPR/Cas9 in AD Models
Study | Technology | Aim | Model | Experimental Design | Result | Implications | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CRISPR/Cas9 in mouse models to edit APP and PSEN | CRISPR/Cas9 | Correct genetic mutations in APP and PSEN1/PSEN2 genes to reduce Aβ production | Transgenic mouse models | Mouse models with correction of APP/PSEN mutations, measurement of Aβ reduction and cognitive improvement | Reduction in beta-amyloid plaques and improvement in cognitive function | Therapeutic potential of CRISPR/Cas9 to reduce the production of toxic proteins | [32] |
Knockout of PSEN1/PSEN2 in murine N2A cells | CRISPR/Cas9 | Knockout PSEN1/PSEN2 to study γ-secretase’s role in APP metabolism and Aβ production | Murine N2A cell lines | Creation of PSEN1/PSEN2 knockout in N2A cells and study of genetic variants and their effects on the Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio | Elimination of Aβ production and identification of variants increasing the Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio | Platform for testing genetic mutations in the presenilin genes | [40] |
CRISPR/Cas9-mediated PSEN1 knockout in N2a cells | CRISPR/Cas9 | Assess the impact of 138 PSEN1 mutations on Aβ40 and Aβ42 production | In vitro reconstitution in N2A-PSEN1/2KO-8/71 cells | Expression of wild-type and mutant PSEN1; measurement of Aβ levels | 90% of mutations reduced Aβ40 and Aβ42 production, while 10% decreased the Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio | Provides insights into how PSEN1 mutations affect γ-secretase activity, informing CRISPR-based strategies to correct or compensate for these mutations | [41] |
CRISPR/Cas9 corrects the PSEN1M146L mutation in a FAD model | CRISPR/Cas9 | To evaluate whether CRISPR/Cas9 can selectively disrupt the PSEN1M146L allele in human fibroblasts and normalize the Aβ 42/40 ratio, a hallmark of AD | Human fibroblasts with the PSEN1M146L mutation were transfected with CRISPR/Cas9 plasmids | In vitro use of CRISPR/Cas9 to correct the PSEN1M146L mutation, followed by analysis of Aβ production and neuronal function | Correcting the mutation restored the Aβ42/40 ratio, reducing amyloid plaque formation and improving electrophysiological properties of neurons | This study emphasizes the potential of CRISPR/Cas9 in FAD treatment by restoring normal amyloid precursor protein cleavage | [42] |
CRISPR/Cas9-correctable mutation-related molecular and physiological phenotypes in iPSC-derived Alzheimer’s PSEN2N141I neurons | CRISPR/Cas9 | To model AD in vitro using PSEN2N141I mutant iPSC-derived BFCNs and assess whether CRISPR/Cas9 correction reverses molecular and functional phenotypes | Human iPSCs from PSEN2N141I mutation carriers and controls | PSCs were differentiated into BFCNs; Aβ42/40 levels and electrophysiological activity were measured; CRISPR/Cas9 was used to correct PSEN2N141I; functional, biochemical, and molecular assays compared mutant, control, and corrected lines | PSEN2N141I neurons showed an increased Aβ42/40 ratio and reduced spike frequency/amplitude; CRISPR/Cas9 correction normalized both molecular and physiological phenotypes | Demonstrates that PSEN2N141I contributes to AD-related dysfunctions in human neurons and that these defects are reversible through gene editing.; supports the amyloid hypothesis and use of iPSC-BFCNs for AD modeling | [43] |
Human fibroblasts from APPswe mutation carriers and APPWT controls | CRISPR/Cas9 | Disrupt the APPswe to reduce Aβ production in AD | Human fibroblasts from APPswe mutation carriers and APPWT controls | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to target the APPswe or APPWT alleles in human fibroblasts with selective gRNAs | There was a 60% reduction in secreted Aβ40 in fibroblasts. In vivo disruption of the APPswe allele in a mouse model led to decreased Aβ production. | It proves CRISPR/Cas9 can selectively disrupt APP mutations in AD models, offering a potential gene therapy for FAD | [44] |
Base editing strategy for insertion of the A673T mutation in the APP gene to prevent AD development in vitro | CRISPR/Cas9 | To insert the A673T mutation in the APP gene to reduce Aβ accumulation and prevent AD development | HEK293T and SH-SY5Y cell lines | Used Cas9 nickase-based base editors for insertion of A673T mutation in the 7 gene; quantification of Aβ levels and deep sequencing to evaluate editing efficiency | The A673T mutation was successfully inserted in 53% of HEK293T cells. This resulted in reduced Aβ peptide accumulation, particularly Aβ40 and Aβ42. | It suggests that base editing could be used to prevent the development of AD by modifying the APP gene and reducing toxic Aβ accumulation | [45] |
Preclinical AD model in pigs (SORL1 knockout) | CRISPR/Cas9 | Create a preclinical AD model in pigs with SORL1 deficiency to study the effect on Aβ and tau production | Pigs with SORL1 knockout | Creation of SORL1 knockout pigs to evaluate preclinical AD biomarkers, including Aβ and tau in cerebrospinal fluid | Increase in Aβ and tau in cerebrospinal fluid, without formation of amyloid plaques | Useful model for exploring the preclinical phase of AD and testing new treatments | [28] |
ZDHHC21 mutation and the role of palmitoylation | CRISPR/Cas9 | Introduce the ZDHHC21 p.T209S mutation to study the effect of palmitoylation on APP and AD pathology | Mouse models with ZDHHC21 mutation | Introduction of ZDHHC21 mutation in mouse models to study the effect of palmitoylation on Aβ and tau | Increase in palmitoylation, Aβ production, and tau phosphorylation, leading to cognitive decline | Alternative mechanism in AD pathogenesis with therapeutic potential linked to palmitoylation | [46] |
TREM2 deletion and microglial regulation | CRISPR/Cas9 | Study the role of TREM2 in regulating microglial response and tau pathology in the presence of amyloid | TauPS2 APP mice (Aβ and tau pathologies), P301Lhomo mice (tauopathy) | TREM2 deletion in TauPS2APP mice to study the impact on microglial function and tau pathology in the presence of Aβ | TREM2 plays a protective role in limiting tau pathology, suggesting it as a target for gene editing therapies | Worsening tau accumulation and brain atrophy in the presence of Aβ, impaired microglial function | [50] |
Behavioral and transcriptomic analysis of Trem2-null mice | CRISPR/Cas9 | Investigate the impact of TREM2 deficiency on neuroinflammation and microglial response in AD models | Trem2 knockout mice (VelociGene and CRISPR/Cas9 versions) | Gene editing was used to create TREM2-deficient mice; transcriptomic analysis and behavioral tests were performed | No significant behavioral or cognitive differences were observed in TREM2 knockout mice; microglial activation was delayed following an LPS challenge. | The study shows that TREM2 is crucial for modulating microglial response in neuroinflammation and suggests caution when interpreting the effects of specific gene knockout strategies in AD research | [51] |
TREM2 Y38C mutation and loss of TREM2 impairs neuronal synapses in adult mice | CRISPR/Cas9 | Investigate the impact of TREM2 Y38C mutation and TREM2 loss on neuronal synapse function and microglial activity in mice | Trem2 Y38C homozygous (Trem2Y38C/Y38C) and Trem2−/− mice | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to generate the Trem2 Y38C mutation in the Trem2 gene of mice; mice were analyzed for synaptic protein levels, microglial morphology, and gene expression changes | TREM2 Y38C mutation impaired synaptic plasticity and myelination in hippocampal regions | The study underscores the role of TREM2 in the development of presenile dementia and highlights the importance of CRISPR/Cas9 for modeling genetic mutations linked to AD and related diseases | [52] |
CysLT1R deletion and its effects on neuroinflammation and synaptic plasticity | CRISPR/Cas9 | Evaluate the impact of CysLT1R deletion on amyloidosis, synaptic plasticity, cognition, and neuroinflammation | CysLT1R gene knockout in APP/PS1 mice to study its effects on Aβ accumulation, synaptic plasticity, and cognitive function | Reduction in toxic Aβ levels, lowered pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6), improved synaptic plasticity and cognitive performance | Another pathway through which gene editing can alleviate AD symptoms by reducing inflammation and improving synaptic protection | Reduction in toxic Aβ levels, lowered pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6), improved synaptic plasticity and cognitive performance | [53] |
2.3. Translating Gene Therapy into Clinical Practice for AD
3. Stem Cell Therapies in AD: Cell Types, Mechanisms, and Applications in Research
3.1. Types of Stem Cells Used in AD Therapy and Research
3.2. Clinical Trials on Stem Cell Therapies for AD
3.3. Emerging Strategies to Enhance Stem Cell Therapies
4. Emerging Experimental Models for AD: The Potential of CRISPR/Cas9 and hiPSCs
4.1. Building an AD Model Using CRISPR/Cas9 and hiPSCs
4.2. The Rise of hiPSCs for Disease Modeling of AD
Isogenic Lines in CRISPR/Cas9 and hiPSC-Based Models: Enhancing Precision in AD Research
5. Challenges and Future Directions in CRISPR and hiPSCs-Based Approaches for AD
5.1. Bioethical Implications of Stem Cell and Genome Editing Technologies in AD
5.2. Current Limitations of Gene Editing and Stem Cell Technologies in AD Modeling and Therapy Development
5.2.1. Limitations of hiPSC-Derived In Vitro Models for AD
5.2.2. Limitations and Challenges of CRISPR/Cas9 Technologies in AD Research
5.3. Future Direction
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Therapy/ Vector | Target/Gene | Disease | Phase | Outcomes/Mechanisms | Limitations/AEs | NCT |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NTLA-2001 | Transthyretin | Hereditary amyloid transthyretin amyloidosis | Phase 1 | In vivo CRISPR/Cas9 editing reduced transthyretin protein levels significantly and durably | Mild, transient adverse events; proof-of-concept for gene editing in humans | NCT04601051 |
CERE-110 (AAV2-NGF) | NGF | AD | Phase 1/2 | Sustained gene expression; axonal sprouting and hypertrophy | Limited vector uptake and targeting; modest clinical effect | NCT00087789, NCT00876863 |
AV-hTERT | Human Telomerase Reverse Transcriptase | AD | Phase 1 | Potential lifespan extension of neurons; neuroprotection hypothesis | Pending results | NCT04133454 |
AAV2-BDNF | BDNF | AD/Mild Cognitive Impairment | Phase 1 | Neurotrophic support; goal to slow neurodegeneration | Pending results | NCT05040217 |
R006 | Progranulin | FTD-GRN | Phase 1/2 | Increased progranulin in cerebrospinal fluid; improved lysosomal function in models | Cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis; transient neurofilament light chain; dorsal root ganglia toxicity | NCT04408625 |
AVB-101 | Progranulin | FTD-GRN | Phase 1 | Aims to restore progranulin; mechanism like PR006 | Results pending | NCT06064890 |
Stem Cell Type | Origin | Potential for AD | Mechanisms of Action | Advantages | Limitations | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Totipotent Stem Cells | Zygote (1–8 cells) | Theoretical, but not used in practice | Can generate all cell types, including extraembryonic tissues | Maximum plasticity | Ethical concerns; not used in research due to developmental role | [68,69] |
Pluripotent Stem Cells (ESCs, iPSCs) | Blastocyst (ESCs), reprogrammed somatic cells (iPSCs) | High potential; ESCs and iPSCs can differentiate into neural cells | Differentiate into neurons, replace lost cells, provide neurotrophic support, reduce inflammation | High versatility; genetic modeling with CRISPR/Cas9 | Risk of uncontrolled growth (tumor formation), ethical issues (ESCs), immune rejection | [70] |
Multipotent Stem Cells (MSCs, NSCs) | Adult tissues (e.g., bone marrow, CNS) | Moderate potential; MSCs and NSCs have been studied in AD models | Modulate immune response, promote neuronal survival, release neurotrophic factors | Immunomodulation, trophic effect, ease of isolation (MSCs) | Limited differentiation capacity, variability in clinical outcomes, potential immune response | [77,84] |
Oligopotent Stem Cells | Hematopoietic or glial tissues | Limited potential; can generate specific cell types, but not widely studied for AD | Generate limited cell types; potential for supporting specific neural functions | Defined specialization | Restricted differentiation potential, limited applications in neurodegenerative diseases | [72] |
Unipotent Cells | Adult tissues | Single cell type | Muscle stem cells, epidermal stem cells | High safety | Limited application to the central nervous system | [72] |
Mechanism/Target | Study Phase | Main Outcomes | Main Limitations | NCT |
---|---|---|---|---|
Autologous Adipose-Derived MSC | ||||
Safety and efficacy assessment to improve cognition or slow progression of AD; in the laboratory, it has shown reduction in inflammation | Phase 1, Phase 2 | Well tolerated, but serious adverse events (e.g., pulmonary embolism, esophageal carcinoma) and no significant benefit on cognition, behavior, or biomarkers compared to placebo | Very small sample size (7 AstroStem, 5 placebo), with no healthy control group or long-term follow-up; in some cases, faster than expected cognitive decline; no significant cognitive benefit over placebo | NCT03117738 |
To compare the efficacy and safety of AstroStem versus placebo in patients with mild Alzheimer’s disease | Phase 2 | NA | NA | NCT04482413 |
Prevent age-related inflammation (“inflamm-aging”), associated with diseases such as AD, through the reduction of pro-inflammatory cytokines | Phase 1 | Safe and well tolerated; significant reduction of inflammatory cytokines and improvement of immune ratios (IL-4/IL-10, IL-2/IL-10) | Phase 1, single-group, open-label study; primary focus is age-related inflammation, although related to AD | NCT05827757 |
Human Umbilical Cord Blood-Derived MSC | ||||
Evaluate safety, dose-limiting toxicity and exploratory efficacy; preclinical evidence indicates functional improvements and amyloid reduction | Phase 1, Phase 2 | Feasible, safe and well tolerated treatment. Common adverse events were mild and transient; three serious related events, no dose-limiting toxicities. No serious events at 36 months. Efficacy not reported. | The efficacy has been evaluated in an exploratory manner and further studies are needed for a thorough understanding. | NCT02054208 |
Long-term safety and efficacy follow-up | Phase 1 | NA | NA | NCT01297218 |
Allogeneic MSCs | ||||
To investigate the safety, tolerability and efficacy of stem cell therapy for various acute and chronic conditions | Phase 1, Phase 2 | NA | NA | NCT04040348 |
Slowing the clinical progression of AD, brain atrophy, and neuroinflammation | Phase 2 | Laromestrocel has shown good safety and clinical improvements, with slowing of brain atrophy and reduction of neuroinflammation | Larger-scale clinical trials of laromestrocel in AD are warranted | NCT05233774 |
Bone Marrow MSCs | ||||
Improve cognitive impairment in AD and other dementias; also evaluate use in combination with near-infrared light | NA (unspecified, recruiting by invitation) | NA | NA | NCT03724136 |
Other preliminary studies | ||||
To determine the safety and efficacy of amniotic tissue and umbilical cord for the treatment of various conditions, including neurological conditions | Phase 1 | Not yet recruiting, results not available; the hypothesis is that the treatments are extremely safe and statistically beneficial | NA | NCT03899298 |
hiPSCs | Recruiting | Develop hiPSCs for disease modeling, drug discovery, and basic research; develop technology that could eventually enable the use of hiPSCs for future transplant therapies | hiPSCs developed in this research are not intended for use in transplant therapy | NCT00874783 |
Study Aim | CRISPR/Cas9 Editing Method | Genetic Target | Validation | Key Results | Limitations | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Application of CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing in hiPSC-derived neurons to study neurodegenerative disease mechanisms | Genome editing using Cas9–gRNA ribonucleoprotein complexes | Neurodegeneration-related genes (e.g., genes involved in mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and synaptic activity) | qPCR, immunocytochemistry, Western blotting, live-cell imaging, functional assays | CRISPR/Cas9 successfully models disease-related mutations, enabling analysis of mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress in patient-derived hiPSC neurons | High variability in differentiation outcomes and challenges in recapitulating late-onset disease phenotypes | [106] |
Investigate the impact of the PSEN1F105C mutation on tau accumulation and mTOR signaling in human neurons using CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing | CRISPR/Cas9 combined with piggyBac transposon was used to introduce heterozygous and homozygous PSEN1F105C mutations in hiPSCs | PSEN1F105C mutation, linked to FAD, affecting Akt/mTORC1 signaling and tau pathology | Genomic sequencing, IF, Western blot, ELISA, and functional assays, including autophagy and lysosomal activity measurements | PSEN1F105C mutation led to increased Aβ production, hyperphosphorylated tau accumulation, and impaired starvation-induced mTORC1 suppression and autophagy; treatment with the mTOR inhibitor Torin1 reduced tau pathology and restored autophagic function | Further studies are needed to validate findings in co-culture and in vivo models to better assess the impact of the mutation on neurodegeneration | [107] |
Generate isogenic iPSC lines and provide a versatile tool for studying gene functions, modeling diseases in vitro, and screening drugs in hiPSCs or differentiated cells. | Dox-inducible Cas9 integrated at AAVS1 via TALENs; gRNAs delivered by lentivirus (gRNA + EGFP); editing induced by doxycycline | AAVS1 locus targeted for dox-inducible Cas9 insertion; specific genes edited via gRNAs; RPS24 gene | Cas9 cassette integration at AAVS1 confirmed with junction PCR (1068 bp product); dox-inducible Cas9 expression verified by Western blot and IF; gene editing validated using T7EI assays | Gene editing efficiency reached ~60% (transfection) and up to 90% (lentivirus); editing occurred rapidly (≥50% in 2–3 days) and was sustained across dox doses; Cas9 expression confirmed with Western blot and IF | Minor limitations include rare random integrations, occasional multicellular wells post-sorting, low single cell survival and clone differentiation after 10 days, mitigated by subcloning and rigorous screening | [109] |
Identification of new pathways contributing to iron accumulation in neuronal cells using CRISPR in iPSC-derived neurons | CRISPRi for gene knockdown | Genes involved in iron homeostasis, mitochondrial electron transport chain, autophagy, and GPI synthesis | Bioinformatics analysis, FeRhoNox-1 fluorescence for iron accumulation, KEGG pathway analysis, scRNA sequencing | Identified new molecular pathways linked to iron accumulation, including mitochondrial dysfunction, autophagy impairment, and GPI synthesis defects | Findings are limited to glutamatergic neurons; selective vulnerability of other neuronal types remains unaddressed | [110] |
To study the effect of MT5-MMP deficiency in human hiPSCs under physiological conditions using CRISPR/Cas9 to assess neural function and neuron-glia interactions | MMP24 knockout hiPSCs were generated using CRISPR/Cas9 with a modified PX459 plasmid | MMP24 gene, encoding MT5-MMP; insertions and deletions within exon 2 | MT5-MMP knockout was confirmed with PCR screening and Sanger sequencing of exon 2 indels; loss of MMP24 expression was validated using qPCR showing minimal mRNA levels in knockout clones | MT5-MMP-deficient neurons showed more and longer neurites, with increased dendritic branching but unchanged mean neurite length and electrophysiological properties; astrocytes showed altered morphology, reduced GLAST expression, and S100β changes in arborized cells; GFAP and ALDH1L1 levels were unaffected | Neuronal immaturity may limit phenotype detection; knockout astrocytes may reduce neuronal support (GLAST); possible developmental delay in astrocytes; data collection not blinded | [111] |
Generate and characterize a 3D organoid model of AD using patient-derived hiPSCs with a PSEN2 mutation and isogenic controls | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to correct the PSEN2N141I mutation in patient-derived hiPSCs, creating isogenic control lines | PSEN2N141I mutation, linked to FAD, affects γ-secretase activity and Aβ production | Morphological and molecular characterization, immunostaining, calcium imaging, and functional neuronal activity assays | AD organoids exhibited increased Aβ42/Aβ40 ratio, asynchronous calcium transients, and enhanced neuronal hyperactivity compared to isogenic controls, mimicking AD pathology | The model lacks microglia and vasculature, limiting full AD pathology replication. Further validation in co-culture systems or in vivo models is needed | [112] |
Investigate the role of DPYSL2-B in neurodevelopmental disorders by creating a CRISPR/Cas9 knockout model in hiPSC-derived glutamatergic neurons | CRISPR/Cas9 editing of DPYSL2-B’s first exon via sgRNA and lipofection | DPYSL2-B, linked to mTOR signaling and schizophrenia | Sanger sequencing confirmed successful knockout; RNA-seq and Western blot analysis showed a significant reduction of DPYSL2-B expression; off-target effects were screened and ruled out | Knockout reduced dendrite length, downregulated mTORC1 and cytoskeletal genes, and disrupted cholesterol biosynthesis and calcium signaling; differentially expressed genes were enriched in schizophrenia-associated loci, with alterations in protein secretion and immune pathways | The study used a single hiPSC line, with potential bypass mechanisms leading to residual CRMP2-B protein; validation is needed in diverse genetic backgrounds; long-term neurodevelopmental effects were not assessed | [113] |
Investigate the role of mitochondrial dysfunction in AD-like pathology using PITRM1-knockout hiPSC-derived neurons and cerebral organoids | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to knock out PITRM1 in hiPSCs by targeting exon 3 and exon 4 with specific sgRNAs | PITRM1, a mitochondrial peptidase involved in proteostasis and Aβ degradation | Mitochondrial function was assessed via Seahorse metabolic flux analysis, calcium imaging, scRNA sequencing, Western blot, and ELISA | PITRM1 deficiency induced mitochondrial stress, increased APP and Aβ levels, and led to tau hyperphosphorylation and neuronal death in cerebral organoids, mimicking AD pathology | Organoids lacked microglia and vasculature, limiting the full replication of in vivo neuroinflammation; further validation in animal models is needed | [114] |
Generation of a homozygous ABCA7-knockout human iPSC line using CRISPR/Cas9 | Knockout of ABCA7 gene via CRISPR/Cas9 targeting exon 5 | ABCA7 gene (exon 5, involved in lipid transport and AD risk) | Western blotting, RT-qPCR, immunocytochemistry, embryoid body differentiation, karyotyping | Generated and validated ABCA7−/− iPSC line with normal pluripotency and neuronal differentiation capacity | Potential off-target effects minimized, but functional consequences of knockout require further validation | [115] |
To develop a CRISPR-engineered human embryonic stem cell model for FTD by introducing the CHMP2B mutation and studying its effects on astrocyte and neuronal function | CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing using sgRNA targeting the CHMP2B intron 5 mutation; HDR was used with ssODN | CHMP2B gene, intron 5 mutation, associated with FTD | Sanger sequencing confirmed successful editing and heterozygosity.; functional characterization of neurons and astrocytes was performed via immunocytochemistry, electrophysiology, calcium imaging, and network analysis | The model exhibited reduced CHMP2B protein levels in neurons and astrocytes, impaired endolysosomal function in astrocytes, and increased glutamate uptake and calcium signaling; while individual neuronal electrophysiology remained unchanged, neuronal networks showed hyperactivity and increased synchronization, indicating altered functional connectivity | The model lacks inhibitory neurons, requires validation in patient-derived cells, does not assess long-term neurodegeneration, and shows unexpectedly low CHMP2B levels, and requires further investigation | [116] |
Develop a drug-screening platform for AD using iPSC-derived cerebral organoids and CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to create isogenic iPSC lines carrying the APOE ε4 variant | APOE ε4, a major genetic risk factor for sporadic AD | High-content screening, RNA-seq, mathematical modeling, and network perturbation analysis | Cerebral organoids carrying APOE ε4 showed increased Aβ and tau accumulation, altered calcium signaling, and gene expression patterns resembling AD; the platform enabled testing of FDA-approved drugs for potential repurposing | The model lacks microglia and blood vessels, requiring further validation in co-culture or in vivo models | [117] |
To investigate the impact of APOE4 on human brain cell types using iPSCs and to assess whether converting APOE4 to APOE3 can reduce AD-related pathologies | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to introduce the Cys112→Arg112 substitution to generate APOE4 from APOE3 and vice versa | APOE gene | Editing was confirmed by Sanger sequencing, whole exome sequencing (no off-targets), and karyotyping (no abnormalities); iPSCs retained pluripotency; cell identity was validated by RNA-seq and immunostaining for neuron, astrocyte, and microglia markers | APOE4 induced AD-like changes in iPSC-derived neurons, astrocytes, and microglia, including increased Aβ, tau, and synaptic activity; APOE4-to-APOE3 conversion reversed most pathological features | In vitro iPSC models cannot fully capture the complexity of AD; APOE4-to-APOE3 conversion did not significantly reduce Aβ42 or early endosomes in sporadic AD neurons, suggesting other contributing factors; effects of the protective APOE2 allele remain poorly understood | [118] |
Develop a precise and efficient method for manipulating gene dosage in human iPSCs using CRISPR/Cas9 nickases | Paired Cas9 nickases were used to create monoallelic, biallelic, or triallelic knockouts of APP in AD patient-derived iPSCs | APP gene, involved in Aβ production and tau hyperphosphorylation, a key factor in AD pathology | Genomic sequencing, immunocytochemistry, Western blot, RNA-seq, and transcriptomic analysis | APP gene dosage directly influenced Aβ secretion and tau hyperphosphorylation in cortical neurons derived from edited iPSCs; correction of APP copy number restored normal neuronal function and reduced apoptotic pathways | Further validation in co-culture and in vivo models is needed to confirm the therapeutic potential of gene dosage manipulation in AD | [119] |
Develop an optimized toolkit for functional genomics in iPSC-derived microglia, integrating CRISPR-based gene regulation and multi-omic profiling | A drug-inducible CRISPR ON/OFF system (CRISPRi) using dCas9 for gene activation/repression without inducing DNA double-strand breaks | Multiple microglia-associated genes, including AD-linked genes such as SORL1, have been investigated for their role in neurodegenerative diseases | Extensive validation using scRNA-Seq, ATAC-Seq for chromatin accessibility, proteomics, and cytokine profiling | The optimized protocol efficiently generates microglia-like cells in 20 days, closely resembling primary human microglia in transcriptomic, epigenetic, and proteomic profiles; CRISPR ON/OFF system enables controlled gene modulation, allowing functional studies of disease-associated variants | Further in vivo validation is required; iPSC-derived microglia cultures may not fully replicate in vivo microglial responses, and additional testing in co-culture or organoid models is needed | [120] |
Application of CRISPR/Cas9 for modeling neurological disorders in hiPSCs | Knockout and knock-in approaches targeting disease-associated genes | Neurological disorder-associated genes (e.g., Parkinson’s, AD, ALS-related genes) | Western blotting, qPCR, immunostaining, functional assays | CRISPR/Cas9 enables precise genetic modifications for studying neural differentiation and disease modeling | Potential off-target effects and variability in differentiation efficiency | [121] |
Generation of a DAPK1 knockout (conditional ready) human embryonic stem cell line using CRISPR/Cas9 | Knockout first (conditional ready) with FRT-flanked SA-stop codon-polyA cassette | DAPK1 gene (9q21.33, involved in apoptosis, autophagy, and inflammation) | Western blotting, qRT-PCR, IF staining, flow cytometry, karyotyping | Successfully generated a conditional-ready DAPK1 knockout hESC line as a valuable model for studying DAPK1 in human development and diseases | Potential off-target effects were analyzed but functional implications require further studies | [122] |
Generation of a miR-26b stem-loop knockout hiPSC line using CRISPR/Cas9 | Knockout of miR-26b stem-loop using sgRNAs flanking the target sequence | MIR26B gene (2q.35, microRNA involved in gene expression regulation) | qRT-PCR, flow cytometry, immunohistochemistry, SNP analysis | Successfully generated miR-26b knockout hiPSC line with maintained pluripotency and differentiation capacity | Further functional validation is needed to assess the impact on downstream pathways | [123] |
Generation and validation of APOE knockout human iPSC-derived cerebral organoids using CRISPR/Cas9 | Knockout of APOE gene using CRISPR/Cas9 with gRNA pairs targeting exon 3 | APOE gene (exon 3, conserved among all four primary transcripts) | RT-qPCR, Western blotting, immunostaining, karyotyping, single-cell clone isolation | Successfully generated APOE−/− iPSC lines and validated their differentiation into cerebral organoids | Lack of vascularization and immune components in organoids may limit full physiological relevance | [124] |
To identify novel atypical subgroups in amyloid-positive patients using integrated multi-omics and network modeling, aiming to uncover key AD drivers and support precision medicine strategies beyond the single-disease view of AD | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to generate isogenic APOE ε4/ε4 lines from parental APOE ε3/ε3 lines | APOE gene | Findings were validated using PBMCs, iPSC-derived brain organoids with microglia, and public brain transcriptome data; key drivers were confirmed in additional cohorts, including an independent Chinese AD cohort using MOFA+ | Multi-omics analysis revealed novel AD subtypes linked to brain changes and driven by autophagy, immune, and lipid pathways; key genes included ABCA7, and PI3K; autophagy was dysregulated peripherally (mTOR-independent) and centrally (mTOR-dependent), especially in APOE ε4/ε4 organoids | More drug testing and long-term studies are needed; findings require validation in independent groups; due to analytical constraints, the 2-year follow-up was short, and autophagy may not be the sole clustering driver | [125] |
Functionally characterize the AD-associated SNP rs148726219 using a human iPSC-based neuronal model | CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing was used to introduce heterozygous and homozygous alleles of rs148726219 in iPSCs, followed by differentiation into induced excitatory neurons | rs148726219 SNP, located in an overlapping intron of FOSB and ERCC1 genes, associated with AD risk | Whole-genome sequencing and RNA-seq confirmed the edited genotypes; functional assays included calcium imaging and transcriptomic analysis. | The SNP had no impact on neuronal differentiation but led to genotype-specific transcriptional changes in mature neurons, particularly in synaptogenesis and calcium signaling pathways; homozygous edited neurons showed enhanced circuit maturation and altered unfolded protein response | Further studies are needed to explore the functional impact in additional neuronal subtypes and in co-culture models including glial cells | [126] |
Generate an iPSC line carrying the AD risk variant p.S1038C in the TTC3 gene using CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to introduce the TTC3 C>G (p.S1038C) mutation in iPSCs derived from a neurologically normal donor | TTC3 gene, associated with late-onset AD, is involved in neuronal development and stress response | Sanger sequencing confirmed the homozygous mutation; pluripotency markers (NANOG, OCT4, SOX2) were validated using immunocytochemistry and qRT-PCR | The edited iPSC line maintained pluripotency, genomic stability, and differentiation potential, providing a resource for studying TTC3’s role in AD pathology | Further differentiation into neuronal lineages and functional assays are needed to assess the mutation’s impact on neurodegeneration | [127] |
Identify neuroprotective genes and therapeutic targets for neurodegenerative diseases using a CRISPR/Cas9 genetic screen in iPSC-derived cortical neurons | Loss-of-function CRISPR/Cas9 screen using a human druggable genome sgRNA library in iPSC-derived cortical neurons | Multiple genes were identified as neuroprotective against tunicamycin-induced ER stress and neuronal death, including KAT2B | Hits validated in an arrayed format, followed by RNA-seq, proteomics, and mass spectrometry for transcriptional and protein-level analysis | The study identified 13 neuroprotective genes, including KAT2B. Pharmacological inhibition of KAT2B with L-Moses attenuated ER stress, CHOP activation, and neuronal cell death in cortical and dopaminergic neurons | Further validation in co-culture and in vivo models is needed to assess functional effects and therapeutic potential | [25] |
Investigation of the impact of APOE genotype on AD pathology using CRISPR-edited isogenic iPSC lines | Knock-in conversion of APOE-ε4/ε4 to APOE-ε3/ε3 using HDR | APOE gene (regulation of cholesterol metabolism and AD susceptibility) | Western blotting, ELISA, immunocytochemistry, flow cytometry, genomic SNP analysis | Variability in cerebral organoid differentiation affects the reproducibility of AD phenotypes; APOE genotype showed minimal influence on Aβ and tau phosphorylation levels | High variability in organoid composition across cell lines and differentiation batches | [130] |
To assess whether ABE can correct the pathogenic SERPINI1 variant and reduce neuroserpin aggregates in patient-specific FENIB models, aiming for a targeted therapy for conformational neurodegenerative diseases | An ABE-based CRISPR/Cas9 approach was used to correct the SERPINI1 c.1175 G>A mutation | SERPINI1 c.1175 G>A (p.G392E) mutation in exon 9, which causes toxic neuroserpin aggregation and severe FENIB symptoms | Models validated by microscopy, Western blot, and qPCR; neuronal identity and function confirmed by markers and electrophysiology; editing checked using sequencing; aggregate clearance and morphology assessed with imaging and Sholl analysis | NG-ABE8e efficiently corrected SERPINI1 c.1175 G>A (up to 92%), cleared aggregates, and partially rescued dendritic morphology; early treatment was more effective; engineered virus-like particlesenhanced ABE delivery (up to 38.5% editing) | No aggregation observed in knock-in neurons, likely due to short culture or low endogenous expression; overexpression may mask heterozygous phenotypes; disease modeling is limited by long aggregation timelines; genome editor delivery remains challenging | [131] |
To identify the causal CLU variant linked to AD risk/protection and uncover its role in regulating neuronal excitability via neuron–glia lipid signaling | Isogenic iPSC lines (T/T, C/C at rs1532278) and a ~200 bp deletion in the nearby open chromatin region were generated using CRISPR/Cas9 with single-stranded oligodeoxynucleotideand paired gRNAs | The main target was SNP rs1532278 (T/C) in an intronic OCR of CLU, with the T allele linked to AD protection; a ~200 bp OCR deletion flanking rs1532278 was also tested for regulatory effects | Editing was confirmed with Sanger sequencing and karyotyping; iPSCs maintained pluripotency and were differentiated into brain cell types with validated identity; CLU expression was assessed using qPCR, RNA-seq, and ELISA; neuronal activity, lipid transfer, astrocyte metabolism, and glutamate uptake were tested in functional assays | The protective T allele of rs1532278 increases CLU expression in neurons, enhancing excitability, dendritic growth, and synaptic activity; neuronal CLU promotes lipid transfer to astrocytes, leading to metabolic changes and reduced glutamate uptake, which supports neuronal activity; OCR deletion reduces these effects; CLU overexpression restores them | iPSC neurons lack full maturity and aging features; in vivo validation is needed. Effects in other cell types cannot be excluded; linkage disequilibrium analysis in all culture types was incomplete; neuronal CLU may also affect astrocyte metabolism; AMPK-related mechanisms need further study | [136] |
Investigate the functional role of the CLU rs11136000 SNP in astrocytes and its impact on oligodendrocyte progenitor cell proliferation and myelination in an iPSC model | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to generate isogenic iPSCs carrying either the risk “C” allele or protective “T” allele of the CLU rs11136000 SNP | CLU rs11136000 SNP, a genetic variant linked to increased risk of late-onset AD | CRISPR-edited clones were validated using genomic DNA sequencing, RNA-seq, and ELISA; functional assays included cytokine stimulation, calcium imaging, and co-culture experiments with OPCs | Astrocytes carrying the “C” allele exhibited increased CLU expression, exacerbated inflammatory response, and elevated CXCL10 levels upon cytokine treatment; these changes inhibited oligodendrocyte progenitor cell proliferation and myelination, potentially contributing to white matter deficits observed in AD patients | The study focused on in vitro models, which may not fully replicate in vivo brain conditions; further validation in co-culture and animal models is required to confirm findings | [138] |
Investigate the role of CX3CR1 in human microglia using CRISPR/Cas9-edited iPSC-derived microglia-like cells | CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing targeting exon 2 of CX3CR1, followed by electroporation and FACS sorting to isolate mutant clones | CX3CR1 gene, a microglia-specific chemokine receptor involved in inflammatory responses and neuroimmune signaling | Successful knockout confirmed using Sanger sequencing and Western blot; expression changes were analyzed using qPCR and cytokine profiling | CX3CR1 knockout led to increased inflammatory responses, higher secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines, and enhanced phagocytic activity in iPSC-derived microglia-like cells | The study focused on in vitro microglia-like cells, which may not fully replicate in vivo microglial behavior; further validation in disease models is needed | [137] |
To assess the effects of chronic tau depletion on Aβ-driven toxicity in human iPSC-derived cortical neurons | Alt-R CRISPR/Cas9 system with single or paired gRNAs targeting exons 1 or 4 of the MAPT gene; Cas9-gRNA RNP delivered via electroporation | MAPT gene (exon 1 or 4 knockout) | Quantitative reverse-transcription PCR, Western blot, immunocytochemistry, long-read Nanopore sequencing, immunoprecipitation-mass spectrometry (IP-MS) | Tau depletion reduced neuronal activity, protected against Aβ-induced hyperactivity, axonal transport deficits, synapse loss, and neurodegeneration; partial tau reduction was also protective | Residual non-canonical tau peptide in exon 4 knockout lines; variable phenotypic expression among isogenic lines; Aβ insults are supraphysiological in some assays | [140] |
To clarify the role of specific tau isoforms in AD by developing a human iPSC-based model and to identify toxic tau subspecies as potential therapeutic targets | MAPT knockout iPSCs were made by transfecting WTC11 iPSCs line (with dox-inducible NGN2) using Cas9 and gRNAs | Two regions in exon 1 of the MAPT gene, which encodes the tau protein | MAPT knockout confirmed with exon 1 sequencing and loss of tau expression (qPCR, IF, Western blot, proteomics); no off-target edits; clones showed normal karyotype, pluripotency, and neuronal differentiation | Tau knockout neurons had shorter neurites and axon initial segments, but normal activity; all tau isoforms rescued these defects; shorter isoforms sorted better to axons; knockout neurons were resistant to Aβ toxicity | iPSC neurons mainly express immature tau isoforms, differing from adult brain; neuronal activity was assessed using calcium imaging, an indirect method; study focused on acute Aβ exposure; long-term effects remain unclear; re-expressed tau isoforms showed lower axonal sorting efficiency than endogenous tau | [141] |
To investigate transcriptomic changes in glutamatergic forebrain neurons derived from hiPSCs carrying FAD-related PSEN1 mutations (A79V and L150P) using CRISPR/Cas9-edited isogenic controls | Precision CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing was used to generate isogenic control lines from patient-derived hiPSCs carrying PSEN1 mutations | PSEN1 gene (mutations A79V and L150P) | qPCR, Sanger sequencing, and RNA-seq verification for mutation presence and absence in edited lines; CRISPRroots used to assess off-targets | 1111 genes (coding and non-coding) were differentially expressed; major alterations observed in extracellular matrix-related genes, calcium signaling, and mitochondrial oxidative stress; 30 of 31 circular RNAs upregulated | model lacks full cell-type diversity (e.g., glia); RNA-seq data from only one time point; findings limited to glutamatergic neurons; trans-acting RNA effects not explored | [142] |
To explore how the APOE3Ch variant protects against AD using iPSC-derived brain organoids, aiming to uncover protective pathways against tau pathology and identify therapeutic targets | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to edit patient-derived iPSCs by correcting the PSEN1 E280A mutation and introducing or removing the APOE3Ch variant | APOE gene (R136S Christchurch variant) and PSEN1 gene (E280A mutation correction) | Pluripotency (immunostaining, qPCR) and normal karyotype confirmed; gene editing validated using Sanger sequencing; AD-like pathology assessed with pTau staining; cell types identified via single-cell RNA-seq; β-catenin increase validated in patient brain (immunohistochemistry); ApoE3Ch–Wnt interaction confirmed using TCF/LEF luciferase assays | APOE3Ch reduced pTau S396 and increased β-catenin in organoids, regardless of PSEN1 status; it altered Wnt/Cadherin pathways and promoted neuronal maturation; postmortem brain confirmed nuclear β-catenin; ApoE3Ch enhanced Wnt3a signaling, unlike ApoE3 WT | Organoids reflect early development; long-term effects need mature models; Wnt validation used non-neuronal cells; off-target edits cannot be fully ruled out; scRNA-seq and tau data may be influenced by development; APOE is mainly expressed in glia; APOE3Ch findings are based on a single rare case | [143] |
To study how APOE4 drives neurodegeneration in AD using iPSC-derived brain organoids, compare APOE3/3 and APOE4/4 effects, test APOE4-to-APOE3 correction, and identify APOE4-linked disease pathways | APOE ε4/ε4 iPSCs from an AD patient were edited to ε3/ε3 | APOE gene | Pluripotency, karyotype, and organoid structure were confirmed; AD phenotypes were validated using immunostaining, Western blot, ELISA, and qPCR for CASP-3, synaptic markers, Aβ, tau, and APOE; transcriptomic changes were assessed by RNA sequencing and gene co-expression analysis; stress granules were evaluated by G3BP staining; appropriate statistical analyses were applied | Organoids showed AD features (Aβ, tau, neurodegeneration); APOE4 increased apoptosis, tau pathology, and stress granules; APOE4 and AD had additive effects; editing APOE4 to APOE3 reduced key AD-related phenotypes | Organoids develop necrotic cores and show size variability; protocol differences may affect results; limited iPSC lines prevented full sex matching; findings are based on in vitro models; insoluble Aβ plaques not seen at 12 weeks; longer culture needed | [145] |
Examine the role of APP in neuronal development and synaptic function by generating APP-null human neurons using CRISPR/Cas9 | CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing was used to knock out APP in hiPSCs, followed by differentiation into neurons using a two-step protocol | APP gene, linked to AD, is involved in cholesterol homeostasis and synaptic function | Genomic sequencing, immunocytochemistry, electrophysiology, live-cell fluorescence imaging, and cholesterol quantification | APP-null neurons exhibited reduced neurite growth, impaired synaptogenesis, and altered synaptic vesicle dynamics; cholesterol supplementation rescued these deficits, suggesting APP’s role in cholesterol-dependent neuronal function | Further studies are needed to confirm findings in co-culture and in vivo models to assess the broader impact of APP deficiency on neuronal function | [148] |
To assess if SORL1 loss causes endosome dysfunction in AD using hiPSC-derived cells and to test if BACE inhibition can reverse these changes. | CRISPR/Cas9 was used to knock out SORL1 in hiPSCs by targeting exon 6 to induce frameshift indels | SORL1 gene | Editing confirmed by sequencing and Western blot; differentiation and markers validated; endosome and APP changes were analyzed using microscopy, ELISA, and Western blot; BACE inhibitor tested; statistical controls applied | SORL1 loss caused SORLA depletion, neuron-specific endosome enlargement, impaired APP trafficking, and increased Aβ secretion; endosome changes were BACE-independent, indicating separate AD pathways converging on endosomal dysfunction | In vitro hiPSC models may not reflect full brain complexity; only neurons and microglia-like cells were studied; the focus on SORL1 loss may not apply to FAD-linked APP mutations | [149] |
To identify how rare SORL1 missense variants found in AD patients affect SorLA maturation and trafficking, cause functional loss, and increase Aβ secretion using CRISPR/Cas9-edited hiPSCs with endogenous SORL1 expression | Missense variants were introduced into hiPSCs using CRISPR/Cas9 with gRNAs and ssODNs via homology-directed repair; a knockout line was also generated through frameshift insertion | SORL1 gene | Edits confirmed using Sanger sequencing and Western blot; hiPSCs validated for pluripotency and karyotype; SorLA maturation, trafficking, and Aβ secretion assessed by Western blot, IF, and ELISA; structural impact predicted in silico; statistical models with correction applied. | Variants R332W, S577P, and R654W impaired SorLA maturation and trafficking, causing ER retention and reduced membrane presence; R332W and R654W increased Aβ40 secretion; structural changes likely underlie these effects; a new mechanism linking maturation defects to AD risk was identified, with rarer variants showing stronger effects | Overexpression may exaggerate effects; hiPSC models lack full brain complexity and long-term aging; only neurons and microglia-like cells were studied; variants were tested in homozygous form, unlike typical patient heterozygosity; other mechanisms were not assessed for all variants; in silico predictions did not always match experimental results | [150] |
To study ABCA7 deficiency in AD using hiPSC-derived brain cell models with homozygous ABCA7 knockout | CRISPR/Cas9 RNP complexes were nucleofected into hiPSCs to generate ABCA7 knockout clones | Exon 4 of the ABCA7 gene was targeted to create a homozygous knockout using a 2-base pair deletion causing a frameshift mutation | Editing confirmed with sequencing; protein loss confirmed with Western blot; knockout hiPSCs showed normal morphology, pluripotency markers, karyotype, and three germ layer differentiation; identity confirmed by STR; mycoplasma test negative | A homozygous ABCA7 knockout hiPSC line was created, lacking ABCA7 protein but retaining pluripotency, normal karyotype, and differentiation ability; identity matched parental cells; a hemizygous line was also generated | NA | [151] |
To study how ABCA7 deficiency affects neuronal metabolism and function, focusing on lipid metabolism and mitochondrial dysfunction in iPSC-derived models related to AD risk | Homozygous ABCA7 knockout hiPSC lines were generated using CRISPR/Cas9 with two sgRNAs | ABCA7 gene | ABCA7 knockout iPSCs showed normal morphology, pluripotency marker expression, and karyotype; protein loss was confirmed by Western blot in organoids; identity was verified against parental lines | ABCA7 knockout impaired synaptic proteins, increased oxidative stress, and disrupted mitochondrial function and morphology; neuronal activity and synapse formation decreased; lipid and NAD+ precursors rescued mitochondrial and synaptic defects; mouse models showed similar findings. | Differences between human organoids and mouse models suggest varying cellular responses; future studies should explore ABCA7 loss on mitochondria in other brain cell types and under diverse conditions, including sex differences | [152] |
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Raffaele, I.; Cipriano, G.L.; Anchesi, I.; Oddo, S.; Silvestro, S. CRISPR/Cas9 and iPSC-Based Therapeutic Approaches in Alzheimer’s Disease. Antioxidants 2025, 14, 781. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox14070781
Raffaele I, Cipriano GL, Anchesi I, Oddo S, Silvestro S. CRISPR/Cas9 and iPSC-Based Therapeutic Approaches in Alzheimer’s Disease. Antioxidants. 2025; 14(7):781. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox14070781
Chicago/Turabian StyleRaffaele, Ivana, Giovanni Luca Cipriano, Ivan Anchesi, Salvatore Oddo, and Serena Silvestro. 2025. "CRISPR/Cas9 and iPSC-Based Therapeutic Approaches in Alzheimer’s Disease" Antioxidants 14, no. 7: 781. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox14070781
APA StyleRaffaele, I., Cipriano, G. L., Anchesi, I., Oddo, S., & Silvestro, S. (2025). CRISPR/Cas9 and iPSC-Based Therapeutic Approaches in Alzheimer’s Disease. Antioxidants, 14(7), 781. https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox14070781