Harrison Patrick T, Hart Stephen
Department of Physiology, BioSciences Institute, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, University College London, London, UK.
Exp Physiol. 2018 Apr 1;103(4):439-448. doi: 10.1113/EP086047. Epub 2018 Jan 25.
What is the topic of this review? This review summarizes the development of gene editing from early proof-of-concept studies in the 1980s to contemporary programmable and RNA-guided nucleases, which enable rapid and precise alteration of DNA sequences of almost any living cell. What advances does it highlight? With an average of one clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) Cas9 paper published every 4 h in 2017, this review cannot highlight all new developments, but a number of key improvements, including increases in efficiency, a range of new options to reduce off-target effects and plans for CRISPR to enter clinical trials in 2018, are discussed.
Genome editing enables precise changes to be made in the genome of living cells. The technique was originally developed in the 1980s but largely limited to use in mice. The discovery that a targeted double-stranded break at a unique site in the genome, close to the site to be changed, could substantially increase the efficiency of editing raised the possibility of using the technique in a broader range of animal models and, potentially, human cells. But the challenge was to identify reagents that could create targeted breaks at a unique genomic location with minimal off-target effects. In 2005, the demonstration that programmable zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) could perform this task led to a number of proof-of-concept studies, but a limitation was the ease with which effective ZFNs could be produced. In 2009, the development of TAL effector nucleases (TALENs) increased the specificity of gene editing and the ease of design and production. However, it was not until 2013 and the development of the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR) Cas9/guide RNA that gene editing became a research tool that any laboratory could use.
本综述的主题是什么?本综述总结了基因编辑从20世纪80年代早期的概念验证研究发展到当代可编程和RNA引导核酸酶的过程,这些核酸酶能够快速、精确地改变几乎任何活细胞的DNA序列。它突出了哪些进展?2017年平均每4小时就有一篇关于成簇规律间隔短回文重复序列(CRISPR)Cas9的论文发表,本综述无法突出所有新进展,但讨论了一些关键改进,包括效率的提高、一系列减少脱靶效应的新选择以及CRISPR在2018年进入临床试验的计划。
基因组编辑能够在活细胞的基因组中进行精确改变。该技术最初于20世纪80年代开发,但主要限于在小鼠中使用。在基因组中靠近要改变的位点的独特位置进行靶向双链断裂可大幅提高编辑效率,这一发现增加了在更广泛的动物模型以及潜在地在人类细胞中使用该技术的可能性。但挑战在于识别能够在独特基因组位置产生靶向断裂且脱靶效应最小的试剂。2005年,可编程锌指核酸酶(ZFN)能够执行此任务的证明引发了多项概念验证研究,但一个限制是有效ZFN的产生难度。2009年,转录激活样效应因子核酸酶(TALEN)的开发提高了基因编辑的特异性以及设计和生产的简易性。然而,直到2013年成簇规律间隔短回文重复序列(CRISPR)Cas9/引导RNA的开发,基因编辑才成为任何实验室都能使用的研究工具。