CRISPR Screening in Primary Human B Cells to Improve B Cell Therapies
Abstract
Pooled CRISPR screening in primary human B cells has been limited by inefficient lentiviraltransduction and high vector copy numbers that compromise single-cell resolution genetic
perturbation. This study established a robust CRISPR screening platform by integrating CD20-
targeted Nipah pseudotyped lentiviral vectors for single-copy sgRNA delivery with recombinant
Cas9 protein electroporation, achieving efficient transduction while maintaining single vector
copy number per cell. Essential gene screens validated the platform's technical feasibility, and
application to an epigenetic regulator screen revealed that the RARA-NCOR2-TBL1XR1
repressor complex negatively regulates plasma cell differentiation, with disruption of individual
components promoting expression of plasma cell surface markers CD38 and CD138.
Furthermore, CRISPR screening for natural killer (NK) cell mediated killing revealed HLA-E as
an important factor in preventing B cell lysis. This versatile CRISPR screening platform enables
systematic investigation of genetic regulators controlling B cell differentiation, survival, and NK
tolerance, with applications spanning fundamental immunology and translational cell therapy
development.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
