Base editing repairs mutation and liver function in mouse model of Zellweger spectrum disorder
The base editing enzyme used in this study is the same one that fixed Baby KJ Muldoon’s disease-causing mutation and saved his life in 2025.
Highlights
- Zellweger spectrum disorder is a group of genetic conditions that affect multiple organs in the body and the most severe form can be fatal in the first year of life.
- Scientists used base editing to correct a disease-causing mutation in the PEX1 gene in human cells and mice. This restored the function of peroxisomes, an organelle in the cell that malfunctions in these disorders.
- The study, which began in 2020, guided the team to focus on a key base editor component — a deaminase enzyme — that was subsequently used to treat baby KJ Muldoon with a different genetic disease in 2025.
In 2025, baby KJ Muldoon to receive a personalized gene editing treatment, which likely saved his life. But the scientific advances that made the groundbreaking treatment possible were years in the making long before KJ was born. One was base editing, the technology developed in 2016 by David Liu and his lab at the ӳý that makes single-letter changes in DNA and was used to correct KJ’s life-threatening mutation.
Another advancement was the development and characterization of a specific version of a key base editor component: the enzyme called a deaminase, which converts a disease-causing DNA letter into a healthy one. Efforts to identify an optimal deaminase for a different genetic disorder began in 2020 in a collaboration between Liu’s lab and scientists from Jackson Laboratory and the University of Southern California (USC). The results of this project, published today in , were so compelling that they spurred Liu to recommend using the same deaminase in when the child’s doctors approached him in early 2025, even before the findings were published.
In the new study, Liu and his team, in collaboration with scientists led by Cat Lutz at the Jackson Laboratory and Joe Hacia at USC, showed that base editing can correct mutations in the PEX1 gene that cause Zellweger spectrum disorder , a rare, life-threatening condition that leads to liver and brain damage and is unrelated to KJ’s disease. The team demonstrated that this base edit, when made in a mouse model of the disorder, restored function of the liver and of peroxisomes — tiny fluid-filled sacs in cells that break down metabolic byproducts but are impaired as a result of the PEX1 mutation.
Funding
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Global Foundation for Peroxisomal Disorders, and Wynne Mateffy Research Foundation.
Paper cited
Gao XD, Presa M, et al. . Nature Biomedical Engineering. Online April 14, 2026. DOI: 10.1038/s41551-026-01651-5












