Current State-of-the-Art
A variety of current tools can be used for DNA sequence edits and for non-editing-based genome engineering including gene regulation and chromatin engineering. Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALEN)-based or clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)-based genome engineering techniques introduce site-specific nicks or double-stranded breaks, which are then repaired using natural repair pathway.1Doudna, J. A., & Charpentier, E. (2014). Genome editing. The new frontier of genome engineering with CRISPR-Cas9. Science, 346(6213), 1258096. View publication. Additional state-of-the-art editing technologies include adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated homologous recombination and meganuclease activity. With CRISPR and TALEN technologies, up to six distinct sites, and up to 15,000 identical sites, have been targeted simultaneously, with efficiencies ranging from 2% to 90%. Gene regulation is achieved through site-specific DNA-binding proteins (zinc-finger proteins, transcription activator-like effectors, and Cas proteins), which fuse to gene regulatory domains to carry out activation or repression of desired genes. In these cases, up to six distinct genes have been targeted for regulation, with repression magnitudes up to 300-fold (knock-down) and activation magnitudes up to 20-fold (knock-up).2Qi, L. S., Larson, M. H., Gilbert, L. A., Doudna, J. A., Weissman, J. S., Arkin, A. P., & Lim, W. A. (2013). Repurposing CRISPR as an RNA-guided platform for sequence-specific control of gene expression. Cell, 152(5), 1173–1183. View publication.
Gilbert, L. A., Larson, M. H., Morsut, L., Liu, Z., Brar, G. A., Torres, S. E., … Qi, L. S. (2013). CRISPR-mediated modular RNA-guided regulation of transcription in eukaryotes. Cell, 154(2), 442–451. View publication.
Breakthrough Capabilities
Ability to reliably create any precise, defined edit or edits (single nucleotide polymorphisms or gene replacement) with no unintended editing in any organism, with edits ranging from a single base change to the insertion of entire pathways.
Ability to generate any defined single base pair change in model organisms.
High-efficiency editing (beyond 90%) across the genome with no off-target activity.
High-efficiency gene insertion or deletion of moderately large changes (but less than 10 kilobases) via homologous recombination.
Precise parallel editing or regulatory modifications (10 to 1000 modifications) across model and non-model organisms, including plants and animals.
Precise, predictable, and tunable control of gene expression for many genes inside diverse cells and organisms across different timescales.
Achieve long-lasting gene repression and activation.
Ability to regulate expression in non-model organisms.
Technologies to monitor and manipulate genetic and epigenetic mechanisms controlling tissue-wide and organism-wide expression levels over time.
Ability to precisely regulate gene expression in whole-body organisms, including humans, with single-cell resolution using dynamic or static control.
Ability to reproducibly deliver editing cargo efficiently and specifically to a given target cells or tissues, and control dosage and timing of the editing machinery.
Improve editors to function without sequence requirements (such as protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) sequences) with activity comparable to 2019 state-of-the-art capabilities.
Routine use of editors without detectable off-target effects (less than 0.001% off-target editing).
Enhance specificity of delivery modalities for high efficiency (90% efficient) editing of cells in a defined tissue.
Quantitative, specific, and multiplexed editing of any site, in any cell, in any organism.
Footnotes
- Doudna, J. A., & Charpentier, E. (2014). Genome editing. The new frontier of genome engineering with CRISPR-Cas9. Science, 346(6213), 1258096. View publication.
- Qi, L. S., Larson, M. H., Gilbert, L. A., Doudna, J. A., Weissman, J. S., Arkin, A. P., & Lim, W. A. (2013). Repurposing CRISPR as an RNA-guided platform for sequence-specific control of gene expression. Cell, 152(5), 1173–1183. View publication.; Gilbert, L. A., Larson, M. H., Morsut, L., Liu, Z., Brar, G. A., Torres, S. E., … Qi, L. S. (2013). CRISPR-mediated modular RNA-guided regulation of transcription in eukaryotes. Cell, 154(2), 442–451. View publication.