Understanding how the first cell lineages in human development are specified and maintained has fundamental importance and clinical implications for regenerative medicine, infertility and pregnancy loss. While mouse models have provided valuable insights into transcription factors regulating early development, translating these findings to human embryos has been limited by ethical, technical and biological constraints. Functional studies of transcription factors in human embryos have been hindered by nuclease-based genome-editing approaches that induce genotoxicity1-3. To overcome this, we applied adenine base editing (ABE8e)4,5 to precisely target an exon splice donor site, resulting in a splicing defect and functional knockout of NANOG, representing the first application of base editing to study a developmental regulator in human embryos. This approach did not trigger genotoxicity and showed limited off-target editing. Loss of NANOG disrupts pluripotent epiblast specification and instead cells differentiate toward a primitive endoderm (yolk sac) or trophectoderm (placental) transcriptional programme. Retention of primitive endoderm differentiation in NANOG-edited human embryos reveals a functional compensation distinct from mouse, underscoring the importance of directly investigating human development. Our findings demonstrate an essential role for NANOG in human pluripotency and epiblast specification, and highlight the utility of base editing for functional interrogation of human development.
Base editing reveals an essential role for NANOG in human embryogenesis
Why This Matters
This study highlights the importance of NANOG in human embryogenesis and demonstrates how advanced base editing techniques can safely and precisely investigate human developmental processes. These insights are crucial for advancing regenerative medicine, infertility treatments, and understanding early pregnancy failures. The successful application of base editing opens new avenues for studying human development without the risks associated with traditional genome editing methods.
Key Takeaways
- Base editing enables precise, non-genotoxic study of human developmental genes.
- NANOG is essential for human pluripotency and epiblast formation.
- This approach paves the way for safer genetic research in human embryos, impacting regenerative medicine and reproductive health.
Get alerts for these topics