| Literature DB >> 24109485 |
Jacob Heintze1, Christin Luft, Robin Ketteler.
Abstract
Manipulation of gene expression on a genome-wide level is one of the most important systematic tools in the post-genome era. Such manipulations have largely been enabled by expression cloning approaches using sequence-verified cDNA libraries, large-scale RNA interference libraries (shRNA or siRNA) and zinc finger nuclease technologies. More recently, the CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) and CRISPR-associated (Cas)9-mediated gene editing technology has been described that holds great promise for future use of this technology in genomic manipulation. It was suggested that the CRISPR system has the potential to be used in high-throughput, large-scale loss of function screening. Here we discuss some of the challenges in engineering of CRISPR/Cas genomic libraries and some of the aspects that need to be addressed in order to use this technology on a high-throughput scale.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; Cas9; RNAi; gene editing; gene silencing; high-throughput; knockdown; screen
Year: 2013 PMID: 24109485 PMCID: PMC3791873 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2013.00193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Overview of genome editing and gene silencing technologies.
| Name | Components | Mechanism of action | Specificity/off-target effects | Possibility to rapidly generate large-scale libraries |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) | Fok1 restriction nuclease fused to multiple zinc finger peptides; each targeting 3 bp of genomic sequence | Induces double-strand breaks in target DNA | Can have off-target effects | No – requires customization of protein component for each gene |
| Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) | Non-specific DNA-cleaving nuclease fused to a DNA-binding domain specific for a genomic locus | Induces double-strand breaks in target DNA | Highly specific | Feasible, but technically challenging ( |
| Homing meganucleases | Endonuclease with a large recognition site for DNA (12–40 base pairs) | Induces double-strand breaks in target DNA | Highly specific | No – limited target sequence specificity available |
| CRISPR/Cas | 20 nt crRNA fused to tracrRNA and Cas9 endonuclease | Induces double-strand breaks in target DNA (wt Cas9) or single-strand DNA nicks (Cas9 nickase) | Some off-target effects that can be minimized by selection of unique crRNA sequences | Yes – requires simple adapter cloning of 20 nt Oligos targeting each gene into a plasmid |
| Post-transcriptional gene silencing (e.g., RNA interference) | Double-stranded RNA | DICER-mediated mRNA degradation; (post-transcriptional) | Can have significant off-target effects | Yes ( |
| Morpholino oligonucleotides | Synthetic oligonucleotide analogs | Sterical blocking of translation initiation complex; (post-transcriptional) | Can have significant off-target effects | Feasible, but technically challenging |
| CRISPRi | sgRNA and catalytically inactive Cas9 | Transcriptional repression of RNA synthesis | To be determined | Yes |