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Journal ArticleDOI

Meganucleases and DNA double-strand break-induced recombination : Perspectives for gene therapy

Frédéric Pâques, +1 more
- 31 Jan 2007 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 1, pp 49-66
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TLDR
Current systems based on redesigned endonucleases will be presented, with a special emphasis on the recent advances in homing endonuclease engineering, and the main issues that will need to be addressed in order to bring this promising technology to the patient.
Abstract
Meganucleases are sequence-specific endonucleases recognizing large (>12 bp) sequence sites and several laboratories have used these proteins to induce highly efficient gene targeting in mammalian cells. The recent development of artificial endonucleases with tailored specificities has opened the door for a wide range of new applications, including therapeutic ones: redesigned endonucleases cleaving chosen sequences could be used to in gene therapy to correct mutated genes or introduce transgenes in chosen loci. Such "targeted" approaches markedly differ from current gene therapy strategies based on the random insertion of a complementing virus-borne transgene. As a consequence, they should bypass the odds of random insertion. Artificial fusion proteins including Zinc-Finger binding domains have provided important proofs of concept, however the toxicity of these proteins is still an issue. Today custom-designed homing endonucleases, the natural meganucleases, could represent an efficient alternative. After a brief description of the origin of the technology, current systems based on redesigned endonucleases will be presented, with a special emphasis on the recent advances in homing endonuclease engineering. Finally, we will discuss the main issues that will need to be addressed in order to bring this promising technology to the patient.

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Reference EntryDOI

Meganucleases and Their Biomedical Applications

TL;DR: This review provides an overview of recent advances in homing endonucleases and zinc-finger nucleases, which are double-stranded DNAses that target large recognition sites and can recognise unique sites of cleavage within a genome, permitting their use for therapeutic purposes in human diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mutational analysis of active-site residues in the Mycobacterium leprae RecA intein, a LAGLIDADG homing endonuclease: Asp(122) and Asp(193) are crucial to the double-stranded DNA cleavage activity whereas Asp(218) is not.

TL;DR: Analysis of target DNA recognition and kinetic parameters of the wild‐type PI‐MleI and its variants disclosed that the two amino acid residues, Asp122 and Asp193 in DOD motif I and II are crucial to the double‐stranded DNA endonuclease activity, whereas Asp218 is not.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inference for High-Dimensional Censored Quantile Regression

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify heterogeneous effects of high-dimensional genetic biomarkers on patients' survival, along with proper statistical inference, in order to identify the heterogeneity of these predictors.
Book ChapterDOI

Strategies to increase genome editing frequencies and to facilitate the identification of edited cells.

TL;DR: This chapter discusses several different approaches including the use of cold-shock, exonucleases, surrogate markers, specialized donor vectors, and oligonucleotides to enhance the frequency of genome editing or to facilitate the identification of genome-edited cells.
References
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Book

Isolation and characterization

TL;DR: Animal Models and Therapy, Directed Differentiation and Characterization of Genetically Modified Embryonic Stem Cells for Therapy, and Use of Differentiating Embryonics Stem cells in the Parkinsonian Mouse Model are reviewed.
Book ChapterDOI

One-step gene disruption in yeast

TL;DR: The one-step gene disruption techniques described here are versatile in that a disruption can be made simply by the appropriate cloning experiment and the resultant chromosomal insertion is nonreverting and contains a genetically linked marker.
Journal ArticleDOI

Site-directed mutagenesis by gene targeting in mouse embryo-derived stem cells.

TL;DR: This work mutated, by gene targeting, the endogenous hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (HPRT) gene in mouse embryo-derived stem (ES) cells and compared the gene-targeting efficiencies of two classes of neor-Hprt recombinant vectors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The double-strand-break repair model for recombination

TL;DR: This work proposes a new mechanism for meiotic recombination, in which events are initiated by double-strand breaks that are enlarged to double- Strand gaps, and postmeiotic segregation can result from heteroduplex DNA formed at the boundaries of the gap-repair region.
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