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Search-and-replace genome editing without double-strand breaks or donor DNA

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TLDR
A new DNA-editing technique called prime editing offers improved versatility and efficiency with reduced byproducts compared with existing techniques, and shows potential for correcting disease-associated mutations.
Abstract
Most genetic variants that contribute to disease1 are challenging to correct efficiently and without excess byproducts2-5. Here we describe prime editing, a versatile and precise genome editing method that directly writes new genetic information into a specified DNA site using a catalytically impaired Cas9 endonuclease fused to an engineered reverse transcriptase, programmed with a prime editing guide RNA (pegRNA) that both specifies the target site and encodes the desired edit. We performed more than 175 edits in human cells, including targeted insertions, deletions, and all 12 types of point mutation, without requiring double-strand breaks or donor DNA templates. We used prime editing in human cells to correct, efficiently and with few byproducts, the primary genetic causes of sickle cell disease (requiring a transversion in HBB) and Tay-Sachs disease (requiring a deletion in HEXA); to install a protective transversion in PRNP; and to insert various tags and epitopes precisely into target loci. Four human cell lines and primary post-mitotic mouse cortical neurons support prime editing with varying efficiencies. Prime editing shows higher or similar efficiency and fewer byproducts than homology-directed repair, has complementary strengths and weaknesses compared to base editing, and induces much lower off-target editing than Cas9 nuclease at known Cas9 off-target sites. Prime editing substantially expands the scope and capabilities of genome editing, and in principle could correct up to 89% of known genetic variants associated with human diseases.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Novel Approaches for Identifying the Molecular Background of Schizophrenia.

TL;DR: The basic approaches used in the so-called post-GWAS studies to generate biological interpretation of the existing population genetic data are described, including both molecular (creation and analysis of knockout animals, exploration of the transcriptional effects of common variants in human brain cells) and computational (fine-mapping of causal variability, gene set enrichment analysis, partitioned heritability analysis) methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts and mechanisms of alternative mRNA splicing in cancer metabolism, immune response, and therapeutics.

TL;DR: In this paper, the vital role of alternative splicing in regulating cancer metabolism and immune response is discussed, and the possible strategies to targeting alternative pre-mRNA splicing pathways or splicing-regulated metabolic pathway in the context of anticancer immunotherapy.
Posted ContentDOI

Highly efficient generation of isogenic pluripotent stem cell models using prime editing

TL;DR: PE is overall more efficient and precise than homology-directed repair of site-specific nuclease-induced double-strand breaks (DSBs) and is more effective in generating heterozygous editing events to create autosomal dominant disease-associated mutations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Paving the way towards precise and safe CRISPR genome editing.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the present state of knowledge regarding the specificity and safety of CRISPR-Cas9 technology to define gRNA, protein and target-related problems and solutions, including sequence-specific off-target effects, immune responses, genetic variation and chromatin accessibility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Engineering Cas9 for human genome editing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight recent advancements and contributions to the growing field of CRISPR-Cas9 engineering, focusing on sgRNA manipulation, PAM recognition, specificity, deaminase fusions, reverse-transcriptase fusion, and structural rearrangements of this important gene-modifying tool.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

limma powers differential expression analyses for RNA-sequencing and microarray studies

TL;DR: The philosophy and design of the limma package is reviewed, summarizing both new and historical features, with an emphasis on recent enhancements and features that have not been previously described.
Journal ArticleDOI

RSEM: accurate transcript quantification from RNA-Seq data with or without a reference genome

TL;DR: It is shown that accurate gene-level abundance estimates are best obtained with large numbers of short single-end reads, and estimates of the relative frequencies of isoforms within single genes may be improved through the use of paired- end reads, depending on the number of possible splice forms for each gene.
Journal ArticleDOI

A programmable dual-RNA-guided DNA endonuclease in adaptive bacterial immunity.

TL;DR: This study reveals a family of endonucleases that use dual-RNAs for site-specific DNA cleavage and highlights the potential to exploit the system for RNA-programmable genome editing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiplex Genome Engineering Using CRISPR/Cas Systems

TL;DR: The type II prokaryotic CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats)/Cas adaptive immune system has been shown to facilitate RNA-guided site-specific DNA cleavage as discussed by the authors.

Multiplex Genome Engineering Using CRISPR/Cas Systems

TL;DR: Two different type II CRISPR/Cas systems are engineered and it is demonstrated that Cas9 nucleases can be directed by short RNAs to induce precise cleavage at endogenous genomic loci in human and mouse cells, demonstrating easy programmability and wide applicability of the RNA-guided nuclease technology.
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