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Gene Editing - II

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August 13, 2017

Click here for Part 1

What is CRISPR?

  • CRISPR stands for Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats.
  • CRISPR - Cas9 is the most prominent genome editing technique .
  • It allows researchers to permanently modify genes in living cells and organisms.
  • This can be used to correct mutations at precise locations in the human genome to treat genetic causes of diseases.
  • Correcting the mutation in an embryo ensures that the child is born healthy and the defective gene is not passed on to future generations.

How does it work?

  • The gene editing tool has two components :
      1. a single-guide RNA (sgRNA) that contains a sequence that can bind to DNA.
      2. the Cas9 enzyme which acts as a molecular scissor that can cleave DNA.
  • In order to selectively edit a desired sequence in DNA, the sgRNA is designed to find and bind to the target.
  • The genetic sequence of the sgRNA matches the target sequence of the DNA that has to be edited.
  • Upon finding its target, the Cas9 enzyme swings into an active form that cuts both strands of the target DNA.
  • One of the two main DNA-repair pathways in the cell then gets activated to repair the double-stranded breaks.
  • While one of the repair mechanisms result in changes to the DNA sequence, the other is more suitable for introducing specific sequences to enable tailored repair.
  • In theory, the guide RNA will only bind to the target sequence and no other regions of the genome.
  • But the CRISPR-Cas9 system can also recognise and cleave different regions of the genome than the one that was intended to be edited.
  • These “off-target” changes are very likely to take place when the gene-editing tool binds to DNA sequences that are very similar to the target one.
  • Though many studies have only found few unwanted changes suggesting that the tool is probably safe, researchers are working on safer alternatives.

Why is CRISPR- Cas9 system significant?

  • Normally, if sperm from a father with one mutant copy of the gene is fertilized in vitro with normal eggs, 50% of the embryos would inherit the condition.
  • However, when the gene-editing tool was used, the probability of inheriting the healthy gene increased from 50 to 72.4%.  There was also no off-target snipping of the DNA.
  • The edited embryos developed similarly to the control embryos indicating that editing does not block development.
  • Clinical trials are under way in many countries to use this tool for treating cancer.
  • It was shown in mice that it is possible to shut down HIV-1 replication and even eliminate the virus from infected cells.
  • In agriculture, a new breed of crops that are gene-edited will become commercially available in a few years.
  • Given all these, making gene editing possible in human reproductive cells deserves serious considerations in terms of legal, social and ethical consequences.

 

Source: The Hindu

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