| Literature DB >> 29968520 |
Fernando Perez Rojo1, Rikard Karl Martin Nyman1, Alexander Arthur Theodore Johnson2, Maria Pazos Navarro1,3, Megan Helen Ryan3,4, William Erskine1,3, Parwinder Kaur1,3,5.
Abstract
In recent years there has been great progress with the implementation and utilization of Clustered Regularly Interspaced Palindromic Repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR-associated protein (Cas) systems in the world of genetic engineering. Many forms of CRISPR-Cas9 have been developed as genome editing tools and techniques and, most recently, several non-genome editing CRISPR-Cas systems have emerged. Most of the CRISPR-Cas systems have been classified as either Class I or Class II and are further divided among several subtypes within each class. Research teams and companies are currently in dispute over patents for these CRISPR-Cas systems as numerous powerful applications are concurrently under development. This mini review summarizes the appearance of CRISPR-Cas systems with a focus on the predominant CRISPR-Cas9 system as well as the classifications and subtypes for CRISPR-Cas. Non-genome editing uses of CRISPR-Cas are also highlighted and a brief overview of the commercialization of CRISPR is provided.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR products; CRISPR-Cas figure; Cas classes; Cas types; Cas13; Cas9; HDR; NHEJ; TALEN; ZFN; genome editing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29968520 PMCID: PMC6067892 DOI: 10.1080/21655979.2018.1470720
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineered ISSN: 2165-5979 Impact factor: 3.269
Figure 1.a) The crRNA from the CRISPR array combines with a smaller tracrRNA molecule, becoming a gRNA complex. b) The gRNA binds with a Cas9 protein, forming a gRNA:Cas9 complex. c) The gRNA guides the Cas9 protein, targeting a specific DNA sequence, which it first recognizes by the PAM motif. The RuvC and HNC nuclease sites cuts the target sequence, leaving two homologous blunt ends. d) The desired DNA repair template inserts the desired gene and repairs the strands by HDR, the product DNA then undergoes adaptation into the organism’s genome.
Overview of CRISPR-Cas classification and subtype defining characteristics [4–8].
| | Class I | Class II | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type I | Type III | Type IV | Type II | Type V | Type VI | |
| Integration module | Cas1/2 [ | Cas1/2 | Unknown | Cas1/2 | Cas1/2 | Cas1/2 |
| Effector module | 4 – 7 Cas protein Cascade | Cas9 [ | Cas12a (cpf1)/Cas12b/Cas12c/[ | Cas13a/Cas13b/Cas13c [ | ||
| Molecule substrate | DNA | RNA | ||||
| Organism | bacteria and archaea | archaea | bacteria | bacteria and archaea | bacteria | |
| Nuclease domain | HDa fused to Cas3 | HD fused to Cas10 | unknown | RuvC and HNH | RuvC and Nuc | HEPN domains (2) |
| tracrRNA | no | No | no | yes | cpf1-no | no |
| Cleavage motif | subtype dependant (7) | subtype dependant (2) | subtype dependant (2) | CG rich NGG (blunt ends) | AT rich (staggered ends) | non-G PFS (ssRNA) |
aHistidine-aspartate domain
Figure 2.a) CRISPR-Cas13 targets ssRNA with its crRNA, and the twin HEPN nuclease domains cleaves the sequence non-specifically after the first crRNA guided cleavage at the binding site, leaving blunt ends. b) The dCas9 combines with an activator/repressor domain to activate/repress an upstream gene, resulting in transcription of that gene into RNA or blocked transcription. c) dCas9-LSD1 complex targets the genome at the chromatin to repress transcription of the targeted gene by demethylation. d) CRISPR-dCas9-EGFP as a fluorescent marker complex for imaging.