Tuesday, March 27 | 5:30 – 8:30 pm
SC3: CRISPR-BASED GENE EDITING FOR TARGETED THERAPIES
While the challenges and risks associated with oligonucleotide therapies still remain, there is a new and better understanding of how genes can be effectively manipulated and delivered. With the rise of gene editing tools and enhanced knowledge of targeted delivery, these therapeutic modalities are once again being embraced with renewed hope and enthusiasm. This course helps you understand how gene editing – particularly the one enabled by the CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats)/Cas9 system – works, and how it can be used to help develop targeted therapies with good efficacy and delivery.
5:30 Welcome Remarks and Speaker Introductions
5:45 The Cure to Human (and Non-Human) Disease Through Gene Editing
Clifford Steer, M.D., Professor of Medicine and, Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development; Director, Molecular Gastroenterology Program, University of Minnesota Medical School
- Evaluating target-based gene editing in the realm of personalized medicine
- Identifying the appropriate clinical targets
- Optimizing the strategies required to cure diseases
- Establishing the safety parameters for gene editing
- Identifying the translational aspects of preclinical safety assessments
- Understanding the ethical issues involved in gene editing for human clinical disease
6:30 CRISPR/Cas9 Genome Editing Tools: From Mouse Modeling to Potential Therapies
Ciro Bonetti, Ph.D., Scientist, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals
- Germline and Somatic gene modifications to generate mouse models to study disease
- New tools to improve precise genome editing
- A new era for gene therapy (challenges and potential applications)
7:15 Coffee and Dessert Break
7:30 Analyzing the Precision of CRISPR-directed Gene Editing at the Target Site in Human Cells
Eric Kmiec Ph.D., Director, Gene Editing Program and Senior Research Scientist, Center for Translational Cancer Research, Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute, Christiana Care Health System
- Strategies and outcomes of gene editing of point mutations related to human disease
- A strategy for analyzing genetic scars left by the action CRISPR/Cas9 and donor DNA
- Discussion of the variability inherent in an analytical tool often used to examine on site mutagenesis
8:15 Q&A with attendees
8:30 End of Course
Speaker Biographies
Clifford Steer, M.D., Professor of Medicine and, Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development; Director, Molecular Gastroenterology Program, University of Minnesota Medical School
Clifford J. Steer is a Professor of Medicine and Genetics, Cell Biology, and Development and a senior investigator at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN. He has been active in the field of liver research for almost four decades. In that capacity, he has been a long-standing member of several National Institutes of Health Study Sections. He has been co-editor of a major scientific journal in liver diseases and presently serves on the editorial boards of three journals. He has published his work in top-ranking scientific journals and numerous textbooks. Steer’s areas of research over the last decade have included gene therapy, liver regeneration, and microRNA regulation of gene function. He has published over 250 scientific articles; and has organized and chaired many national and international scientific conferences. In recognition of his work he has received the Holloman Award in Biotechnology in 1998; the Thorne Stroke Award and Department of Medicine Faculty Award for Outstanding Research both in 2004; and the Senior Investigator Award from the University of Minnesota Medical School in 2012. He was elected into the American Society for Clinical Investigation in 1991; and in 2014 was made an inaugural Fellow of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases. His work has been written up in newspapers around the world, Time magazine, and in 1998 was featured in the Village Voice. He was most recently appointed as Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs in the Medical School.
Ciro Bonetti, Ph.D., Scientist, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals
Ciro Bonetti is currently a Scientist at Regeneron Pharmaceuticals® in New York. He earned his PhD in Medical Genetics at TIGEM, Telethon Institute of Genetics and Medicine in Italy, where he applied and developed gene therapy approaches for recessive and dominant retinal congenital disorders. As American-Italian Cancer Foundation fellow, he moved for his postdoc to Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. During this time, he became an expert in a variety of genome editing tools including CRISPR/Cas9, which he has used to understand how non-coding genes affect normal physiology and impact human disease. He also adapted these tools to generate precise somatic mutations in terminally differentiated cells. This will impact not only our ability to create more precise animal models of human disease but will also pave the way to novel therapeutic opportunities.
Eric Kmiec Ph.D., Director, Gene Editing Program and Senior Research Scientist, Center for Translational Cancer Research, Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute, Christiana Care Health System
Widely recognized as a pioneer in the breakthrough technology, gene editing, Dr. Eric Kmiec is the Founder and Director of the Gene Editing Institute at the Helen F. Graham Cancer Center & Research Institute at Christiana Healthcare System with faculty appointments at the University of Delaware, the Wistar Institute and Georgetown University Medical School. His laboratory has been supported by the National Institute of Health in the form of R01 and R21 grants respectively for over 22 years. He has also received funding from the High Q Foundation, Hereditary Disease Foundation, the American Cancer Society, the March of Dimes, Pfizer, Bio-Rad, Tapestry Biotherapeutics and a variety of biotechnology companies. He serves on the editorial boards of many journals, has authored over 150 peer-reviewed journal publications as primary or senior author, numerous review articles and edited several books on gene therapy. Dr. Kmiec has 15 issued patents with 30 applications and has founded two biotechnology companies (Kimeragen , now Cibus in San Diego California, and Orphagenix LLC). He is currently a Senior Consultant and member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the gene editing company, ETAGEN, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts. From 1999-2008, Dr. Kmiec was a full, tenured Professor of Biology at the University of Delaware and Director of the Applied Genomics Laboratory at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute.