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The genetic approaches to identify a gene involved in a disease or process, genome editing, and nuclease-based genome editing. It also discusses the pioneers of genome editing and the CRISPR/Cas9 system found in bacteria. the use of viral genome editing and rAAV genome editing. It also explains the use of nuclease-induced double-strand breaks and homology-directed repair for precise sequence insertion.
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Precise alterations to the genome Single base pair changes (^) Knock-out rAAV CRISPR (^) TALENs Insertion A gene knockout is when a gene has acquired a frameshift mutation such that it no longer expresses any functional protein
Xanthomonas bacteria express TAL arrays to bind and activate host promoters TAL array is a series of DNA binding domains assembled to recognise a specific sequence 33-34 amino acid sequence – only 12th^ and 13th^ residue vary – and determine nucleotide binding. We can construct these arrays, add a nuclease and use for genome editing Engineered nucleases which will cut at a desired position in the genome TGAGGAGGCGGCAACG GCGGGCGCCGGGGCGG CGGGCCCCGGGGCGAGCA ACTCCTCCGCCGTTGC CGCCCGCGGCCCCGCC GCCCGGGGCCCCGCTCGT Fok Fok Cleavage
CRISPR-Cas system – an form of acquired immunity found in bacteria. The guide RNA directs the Cas9 protein to a target site. Creating a guide RNA is very simple. Cas9 Protein Cleavage Guide RNA
CRISPR/Cas9 is a system found in bacteria and involved in immune defence. Bacteria use CRISPR/Cas9 to cut up the DNA of invading bacterial viruses that might otherwise kill them.
Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer Doudna share the Nobel Chemistry prize in 2020 for developing the precise genome-editing technology.
TALENs and CRISPRS Nuclease-induced DSB NHEJ-mediated repair (non-homologous end joining) Insertion or deletion mutations HDR-mediated repair (Homology directed repair) Single nucleotide alterations Donor Template Donor Template Precise sequence insertion