Current State-of-the-Art
Currently for multicellular systems and organisms, our technology is closely aligned with natural reproduction: we edit gametes or embryos, and rely on natural processes to differentiate genetically-identical cells into tissues. Gene editing methodology allows substantial improvements and inclusion of novel biochemical and molecular changes. Today our engineering abilities in plants are limited to stable integration of small genetic circuits (fewer than 200 kilobases). Examples of engineered modification of animals include genome editing of chicken embryos to produce virus resistance1Looi, F. Y., Baker, M. L., Townson, T., Richard, M., Novak, B., Doran, T. J., & Short, K. R. (2018). Creating disease resistant chickens: A viable solution to avian influenza? Viruses, 10(10). View publication.
Sid, H., & Schusser, B. (2018). Applications of gene editing in chickens: A new era is on the horizon. Frontiers in Genetics, 9, 456. View publication. and the inactivation of porcine endogenous retroviruses in pigs for human organs transplants2Niu, D., Wei, H.-J., Lin, L., George, H., Wang, T., Lee, I.-H., … Yang, L. (2017). Inactivation of porcine endogenous retrovirus in pigs using CRISPR-Cas9. Science, 357(6357), 1303–1307. View publication.
Ross, M. J., & Coates, P. T. (2018). Using CRISPR to inactivate endogenous retroviruses in pigs: an important step toward safe xenotransplantation? Kidney International, 93(1), 4–6. View publication., but significant work is necessary before we are able to selectively edit and modify multicellular eukaryotes with confidence and consistency.
Generally, we need a better understanding of cell-to-cell interactions and to establish stable modifications within multicellular systems. Current state-of-the-art in multicellular engineering includes tools and technologies for some plants3Farré, G., Blancquaert, D., Capell, T., Van Der Straeten, D., Christou, P., & Zhu, C. (2014). Engineering complex metabolic pathways in plants. Annual Review of Plant Biology, 65, 187–223. View publication. and fungi (such as Aspergillus4Lubertozzi, D., & Keasling, J. D. (2009). Developing Aspergillus as a host for heterologous expression. Biotechnology Advances, 27(1), 53–75. View publication.), but most advances toward this goal have occurred in the engineering of a single cell type within a multicellular organism (for example, the introduction of the Polled trait into dairy cattle breeds5Van Enennaam, A. (2018, June 12). Use of Gene Editing to Introduce the Polled Trait into Elite Germplasm.) and germline engineering. An emerging technology in multicellular system engineering is cell-scaffolding (loading specialized cells onto engineered matrices) and enabled control over the three-dimensional shape and structure of a system. Advancements in engineering for tissue- and organ-on-a-chip technologies are also helping to bring about advancements in this area.
For related reading, please see Biomolecule, Pathway, and Circuit Engineering: Holistic, integrated design of multi-part genetic systems (i.e., circuits and pathways).
Breakthrough Capabilities & Milestones
Ability to control differentiation and de-differentiation of cells within a population.
On-demand, reproducible functionalization of simple micro-tissues or micro-consortia made up of two or more engineered cell types.
Programmable and regulatable pathways that can be induced to differentiate or de-differentiate somatic cells.
Ability to characterize and control the three-dimensional (3D) architecture of multicellular systems.
Characterize existing tissue components and standardize measurements to evaluate function.
Identification of novel 3D scaffold designs that can lead to desirable cellular properties.
Create modular, synthetic communication circuits that can be implemented in tissues to allow for control of new or existing cellular communication systems.
Bottom-up design and construction of whole organs at the centimeter-length scale.
Ability to achieve stable non-heritable changes in somatic cells.
Routine delivery of biomolecule “effectors” (i.e., DNA, RNA, proteins) into slowly-dividing or non-dividing cells.
Generation of effective artificial epigenetic chromosomal states and maturation of the emerging field of chromatin engineering.
Ability to generate cell states that are stable and effective after the inducer/effector is removed in certain model tissues.
Nimble adaptation of somatic cell engineering technologies to any natural tissue at any developmental stage.
Ability to make predictable and precise, targeted, heritable changes through germline editing.
Complete sequence of select host genomes to allow design of targets for gene editing.
Define and validate tissue-specific DNA parts in plants.
Efficient germline transformation systems developed in targeted hosts.
Ability to deliver transgene constructs to most (>90%) somatic cells in a higher eukaryote organism to rapidly prototype transgenic phenotypes.
Temporally controlled transgene expression that works on the scale of generations.
Efficient gene editing in differentiated cells.
Ability to domesticate engineered biological parts to confer immune tolerance in immunocompetent organisms.
Ability to coordinate engineered multicellular functions in intact organisms via orthogonal communication systems.
On-demand gene editing of organisms with desired traits.
Routine, on-demand, efficient germline editing for any targeted hosts of interest at high-throughput scale.
Footnotes
- Looi, F. Y., Baker, M. L., Townson, T., Richard, M., Novak, B., Doran, T. J., & Short, K. R. (2018). Creating disease resistant chickens: A viable solution to avian influenza? Viruses, 10(10). View publication.; Sid, H., & Schusser, B. (2018). Applications of gene editing in chickens: A new era is on the horizon. Frontiers in Genetics, 9, 456. View publication.
- Niu, D., Wei, H.-J., Lin, L., George, H., Wang, T., Lee, I.-H., … Yang, L. (2017). Inactivation of porcine endogenous retrovirus in pigs using CRISPR-Cas9. Science, 357(6357), 1303–1307. View publication.; Ross, M. J., & Coates, P. T. (2018). Using CRISPR to inactivate endogenous retroviruses in pigs: an important step toward safe xenotransplantation? Kidney International, 93(1), 4–6. View publication.
- Farré, G., Blancquaert, D., Capell, T., Van Der Straeten, D., Christou, P., & Zhu, C. (2014). Engineering complex metabolic pathways in plants. Annual Review of Plant Biology, 65, 187–223. View publication.
- Lubertozzi, D., & Keasling, J. D. (2009). Developing Aspergillus as a host for heterologous expression. Biotechnology Advances, 27(1), 53–75. View publication.
- Van Enennaam, A. (2018, June 12). Use of Gene Editing to Introduce the Polled Trait into Elite Germplasm. Retrieved from https://www.dairyherd.com/article/use-gene-editing-introduce-polled-trait-elite-germplasm.