Genome editing, or genome engineering, or gene editing, is a type of genetic engineering in which DNA is inserted, deleted, modified or replaced in the genome of a living organism. Unlike early genetic engineering techniques that randomly inserts genetic material into a host genome, genome editing targets the insertions to site specific locations.
History
Genome
editing with engineered nucleases, i.e. all three major classes of these
enzymes—zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), transcription activator-like
effector nucleases (TALENs) and engineered meganucleases—were selected
by Nature Methods as the 2011 Method of the Year. The CRISPR-Cas system was selected by Science as 2015 Breakthrough of the Year.
As of 2015 four families of engineered nucleases were used: meganucleases, zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), transcription activator-like effector-based nucleases (TALEN), and the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR/Cas9) system. Nine genome editors were available as of 2017.
In 2018, the common methods for such editing used engineered nucleases, or "molecular scissors". These nucleases create site-specific double-strand breaks (DSBs) at desired locations in the genome. The induced double-strand breaks are repaired through nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) or homologous recombination (HR), resulting in targeted mutations ('edits').
In May 2019, lawyers in China reported, in light of the purported creation by Chinese scientist He Jiankui of the first gene-edited humans (see Lulu and Nana controversy), the drafting of regulations that anyone manipulating the human genome by gene-editing techniques, like CRISPR, would be held responsible for any related adverse consequences.
A cautionary perspective on the possible blind spots and risks of
CRISPR and related biotechnologies has been recently discussed, focusing on the stochastic nature of cellular control processes.
In February 2020, a US trial safely showed CRISPR gene editing on 3 cancer patients.
Background
Genetic engineering
as method of introducing new genetic elements into organisms has been
around since the 1970s. One drawback of this technology has been the
random nature with which the DNA is inserted into the hosts genome. This can impair or alter other genes within the organism. Methods were sought which targeted the inserted genes to specific sites
within an organism genome. As well as reducing off-target effects it
also enabled the editing of specific sequences within a genome. This
could be used for research purposes, by targeting mutations to specific
genes, and in gene therapy.
By inserting a functional gene into an organism and targeting it to
replace the defective one it could be possible to cure certain genetic diseases.
Gene targeting
Homologous recombination
Early methods to target genes to certain sites within a genome of an organism (called gene targeting) relied on homologous recombination (HR).
By creating DNA constructs that contain a template that matches the
targeted genome sequence it is possible that the HR processes within the
cell will insert the construct at the desired location. Using this
method on embryonic stem cells led to the development of transgenic mice with targeted genes knocked out. It has also been possible to knock in genes or alter gene expression patterns.
In recognition of their discovery of how homologous recombination can
be used to introduce genetic modifications in mice through embryonic
stem cells, Mario Capecchi, Martin Evans and Oliver Smithies were awarded the 2007 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.
Conditional targeting
If a vital gene is knocked out it can prove lethal to the organism. In order to study the function of these genes site specific recombinases (SSR) were used. The two most common types are the Cre-LoxP and Flp-FRT systems. Cre recombinase
is an enzyme that removes DNA by homologous recombination between
binding sequences known as Lox-P sites. The Flip-FRT system operates in a
similar way, with the Flip recombinase recognising FRT sequences. By
crossing an organism containing the recombinase sites flanking the gene
of interest with an organism that express the SSR under control of tissue specific promoters,
it is possible to knock out or switch on genes only in certain cells.
These techniques were also used to remove marker genes from transgenic
animals. Further modifications of these systems allowed researchers to
induce recombination only under certain conditions, allowing genes to be
knocked out or expressed at desired times or stages of development.
Process
Double strand break repair
Genome editing relies on the concept of DNA double stranded break (DSB) repair mechanics. There are two major pathways that repair DSB; non-homologous end joining (NHEJ) and homology directed repair
(HDR). NHEJ uses a variety of enzymes to directly join the DNA ends
while the more accurate HDR uses a homologous sequence as a template for
regeneration of missing DNA sequences at the break point. This can be
exploited by creating a vector with the desired genetic elements within a sequence that is homologous
to the flanking sequences of a DSB. This will result in the desired
change being inserted at the site of the DSB. While HDR based gene
editing is similar to the homologous recombination based gene targeting,
the rate of recombination is increased by at least three orders of
magnitude.
Engineered nucleases
The key to genome editing is creating a DSB at a specific point
within the genome. Commonly used restriction enzymes are effective at
cutting DNA, but generally recognize and cut at multiple sites. To
overcome this challenge and create site-specific DSB, three distinct
classes of nucleases have been discovered and bioengineered to date.
These are the Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), transcription-activator like
effector nucleases (TALEN), meganucleases and the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR/Cas9) system.
Meganucleases
Meganucleases, discovered in the late 1980s, are enzymes in the endonuclease family which are characterized by their capacity to recognize and cut large DNA sequences (from 14 to 40 base pairs). The most widespread and best known meganucleases are the proteins in the LAGLIDADG family, which owe their name to a conserved amino acid sequence.
Meganucleases, found commonly in microbial species, have the
unique property of having very long recognition sequences (>14bp)
thus making them naturally very specific.
However, there is virtually no chance of finding the exact meganuclease
required to act on a chosen specific DNA sequence. To overcome this
challenge, mutagenesis and high throughput screening methods have been used to create meganuclease variants that recognize unique sequences. Others have been able to fuse various meganucleases and create hybrid enzymes that recognize a new sequence.
Yet others have attempted to alter the DNA interacting aminoacids of
the meganuclease to design sequence specific meganucelases in a method
named rationally designed meganuclease.
Another approach involves using computer models to try to predict as
accurately as possible the activity of the modified meganucleases and
the specificity of the recognized nucleic sequence.
A large bank containing several tens of thousands of protein
units has been created. These units can be combined to obtain chimeric
meganucleases that recognize the target site, thereby providing research
and development tools that meet a wide range of needs (fundamental
research, health, agriculture, industry, energy, etc.) These include the
industrial-scale production of two meganucleases able to cleave the
human XPC gene; mutations in this gene result in Xeroderma pigmentosum, a severe monogenic disorder that predisposes the patients to skin cancer and burns whenever their skin is exposed to UV rays.
Meganucleases have the benefit of causing less toxicity in cells than methods such as Zinc finger nuclease (ZFN), likely because of more stringent DNA sequence recognition;
however, the construction of sequence-specific enzymes for all possible
sequences is costly and time consuming, as one is not benefiting from
combinatorial possibilities that methods such as ZFNs and TALEN-based
fusions utilize.
Zinc finger nucleases
As
opposed to meganucleases, the concept behind ZFNs and TALEN technology
is based on a non-specific DNA cutting catalytic domain, which can then
be linked to specific DNA sequence recognizing peptides such as zinc
fingers and transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs).
The first step to this was to find an endonuclease whose DNA
recognition site and cleaving site were separate from each other, a
situation that is not the most common among restriction enzymes.
Once this enzyme was found, its cleaving portion could be separated
which would be very non-specific as it would have no recognition
ability. This portion could then be linked to sequence recognizing
peptides that could lead to very high specificity.
Zinc finger motifs occur in several transcription factors.
The zinc ion, found in 8% of all human proteins, plays an important
role in the organization of their three-dimensional structure. In
transcription factors, it is most often located at the protein-DNA
interaction sites, where it stabilizes the motif. The C-terminal part of
each finger is responsible for the specific recognition of the DNA
sequence.
The recognized sequences are short, made up of around 3 base
pairs, but by combining 6 to 8 zinc fingers whose recognition sites have
been characterized, it is possible to obtain specific proteins for
sequences of around 20 base pairs. It is therefore possible to control
the expression of a specific gene. It has been demonstrated that this
strategy can be used to promote a process of angiogenesis in animals.
It is also possible to fuse a protein constructed in this way with the
catalytic domain of an endonuclease in order to induce a targeted DNA
break, and therefore to use these proteins as genome engineering tools.
The method generally adopted for this involves associating two
DNA binding proteins – each containing 3 to 6 specifically chosen zinc
fingers – with the catalytic domain of the FokI
endonuclease which need to dimerize to cleave the double-strand DNA.
The two proteins recognize two DNA sequences that are a few nucleotides
apart. Linking the two zinc finger proteins to their respective
sequences brings the two FokI domains closer together. FokI requires
dimerization to have nuclease activity and this means the specificity
increases dramatically as each nuclease partner would recognize a unique
DNA sequence. To enhance this effect, FokI nucleases have been engineered that can only function as heterodimers.
Several approaches are used to design specific zinc finger
nucleases for the chosen sequences. The most widespread involves
combining zinc-finger units with known specificities (modular assembly).
Various selection techniques, using bacteria, yeast or mammal cells
have been developed to identify the combinations that offer the best
specificity and the best cell tolerance. Although the direct genome-wide
characterization of zinc finger nuclease activity has not been
reported, an assay that measures the total number of double-strand DNA
breaks in cells found that only one to two such breaks occur above
background in cells treated with zinc finger nucleases with a 24 bp
composite recognition site and obligate heterodimer FokI nuclease domains.
The heterodimer functioning nucleases would avoid the possibility
of unwanted homodimer activity and thus increase specificity of the
DSB. Although the nuclease portions of both ZFNs and TALEN constructs
have similar properties, the difference between these engineered
nucleases is in their DNA recognition peptide. ZFNs rely on Cys2-His2
zinc fingers and TALEN constructs on TALEs. Both of these DNA
recognizing peptide domains have the characteristic that they are
naturally found in combinations in their proteins. Cys2-His2 Zinc
fingers typically happen in repeats that are 3 bp apart and are found in
diverse combinations in a variety of nucleic acid interacting proteins
such as transcription factors.
Each finger of the Zinc finger domain is completely independent and
the binding capacity of one finger is impacted by its neighbor. TALEs on
the other hand are found in repeats with a one-to-one recognition ratio
between the amino acids and the recognized nucleotide pairs. Because
both zinc fingers and TALEs happen in repeated patterns, different
combinations can be tried to create a wide variety of sequence
specificities.
Zinc fingers have been more established in these terms and approaches
such as modular assembly (where Zinc fingers correlated with a triplet
sequence are attached in a row to cover the required sequence), OPEN
(low-stringency selection of peptide domains vs. triplet nucleotides
followed by high-stringency selections of peptide combination vs. the
final target in bacterial systems), and bacterial one-hybrid screening
of zinc finger libraries among other methods have been used to make site
specific nucleases.
Zinc finger nucleases
are research and development tools that have already been used to
modify a range of genomes, in particular by the laboratories in the Zinc
Finger Consortium. The US company Sangamo BioSciences uses zinc finger nucleases to carry out research into the genetic engineering of stem cells and the modification of immune cells for therapeutic purposes.
Modified T lymphocytes are currently undergoing phase I clinical trials
to treat a type of brain tumor (glioblastoma) and in the fight against
AIDS.
TALEN
Transcription activator-like effector nucleases
(TALENs) are specific DNA-binding proteins that feature an array of 33
or 34-amino acid repeats. TALENs are artificial restriction enzymes
designed by fusing the DNA cutting domain of a nuclease to TALE domains,
which can be tailored to specifically recognize a unique DNA sequence.
These fusion proteins serve as readily targetable "DNA scissors" for
gene editing applications that enable to perform targeted genome
modifications such as sequence insertion, deletion, repair and
replacement in living cells. The DNA binding domains, which can be designed to bind any desired DNA sequence, comes from TAL effectors, DNA-binding proteins excreted by plant pathogenic Xanthomanos app.
TAL effectors consists of repeated domains, each of which contains a
highly conserved sequence of 34 amino acids, and recognize a single DNA
nucleotide within the target site. The nuclease can create double strand
breaks at the target site that can be repaired by error-prone non-homologous end-joining
(NHEJ), resulting in gene disruptions through the introduction of small
insertions or deletions. Each repeat is conserved, with the exception
of the so-called repeat variable di-residues (RVDs) at amino acid
positions 12 and 13. The RVDs determine the DNA sequence to which the
TALE will bind. This simple one-to-one correspondence between the TALE
repeats and the corresponding DNA sequence makes the process of
assembling repeat arrays to recognize novel DNA sequences
straightforward. These TALEs can be fused to the catalytic domain from a
DNA nuclease, FokI, to generate a transcription activator-like effector
nuclease (TALEN). The resultant TALEN constructs combine specificity
and activity, effectively generating engineered sequence-specific
nucleases that bind and cleave DNA sequences only at pre-selected sites.
The TALEN target recognition system is based on an easy-to-predict
code. TAL nucleases are specific to their target due in part to the
length of their 30+ base pairs binding site. TALEN can be performed
within a 6 base pairs range of any single nucleotide in the entire
genome.
TALEN constructs are used in a similar way to designed zinc
finger nucleases, and have three advantages in targeted mutagenesis: (1)
DNA binding specificity is higher, (2) off-target effects are lower, and (3) construction of DNA-binding domains is easier.
CRISPR
CRISPRs (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) are genetic elements that bacteria use as a kind of acquired immunity
to protect against viruses. They consist of short sequences that
originate from viral genomes and have been incorporated into the
bacterial genome. Cas (CRISPR associated proteins) process these
sequences and cut matching viral DNA sequences. By introducing plasmids
containing Cas genes and specifically constructed CRISPRs into
eukaryotic cells, the eukaryotic genome can be cut at any desired
position. Several companies, including Cellectis and Editas, have been working to monetize the CRISPR method while developing gene-specific therapies.
Precision and efficiency of engineered nucleases
Meganucleases
method of gene editing is the least efficient of the methods mentioned
above. Due to the nature of its DNA-binding element and the cleaving
element, it is limited to recognizing one potential target every 1,000
nucleotides.
ZFN was developed to overcome the limitations of meganuclease. The
number of possible targets ZFN can recognized was increased to one in
every 140 nucleotides.
However, both methods are unpredictable due to the ability of their
DNA-binding elements affecting each other. As a result, high degrees of
expertise and lengthy and costly validations processes are required.
TALE nucleases being the most precise and specific method yields a
higher efficiency than the previous two methods. It achieves such
efficiency because the DNA-binding element consists of an array of TALE
subunits, each of them having the capability of recognizing a specific
DNA nucleotide chain independent from others, resulting in a higher
number of target sites with high precision. New TALE nucleases take
about one week and a few hundred dollars to create, with specific
expertise in molecular biology and protein engineering.
CRISPR nucleases have a slightly lower precision when compared to
the TALE nucleases. This is caused by the need of having a specific
nucleotide at one end in order to produce the guide RNA that CRISPR uses
to repair the double-strand break it induces. It has been shown to be
the quickest and cheapest method, only costing less than two hundred
dollars and a few days of time.
CRISPR also requires the least amount of expertise in molecular biology
as the design lays in the guide RNA instead of the proteins. One major
advantage that CRISPR has over the ZFN and TALEN methods is that it can
be directed to target different DNA sequences using its ~80nt CRISPR
sgRNAs, while both ZFN and TALEN methods required construction and
testing of the proteins created for targeting each DNA sequence.
Because off-target activity
of an active nuclease would have potentially dangerous consequences at
the genetic and organismal levels, the precision of meganucleases, ZFNs,
CRISPR, and TALEN-based fusions has been an active area of research.
While variable figures have been reported, ZFNs tend to have more
cytotoxicity than TALEN methods or RNA-guided nucleases, while TALEN and
RNA-guided approaches tend to have the greatest efficiency and fewer
off-target effects.
Based on the maximum theoretical distance between DNA binding and
nuclease activity, TALEN approaches result in the greatest precision.
Multiplex Automated Genomic Engineering (MAGE)
The methods for scientists and researchers wanting to study genomic
diversity and all possible associated phenotypes were very slow,
expensive, and inefficient. Prior to this new revolution, researchers
would have to do single-gene manipulations and tweak the genome one
little section at a time, observe the phenotype, and start the process
over with a different single-gene manipulation.
Therefore, researchers at the Wyss Institute at Harvard University
designed the MAGE, a powerful technology that improves the process of in
vivo genome editing. It allows for quick and efficient manipulations of
a genome, all happening in a machine small enough to put on top of a
small kitchen table. Those mutations combine with the variation that
naturally occurs during cell mitosis creating billions of cellular
mutations.
Chemically combined, synthetic single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and a
pool of oligionucleotides are introduced at targeted areas of the cell
thereby creating genetic modifications. The cyclical process involves
transformation of ssDNA (by electroporation)
followed by outgrowth, during which bacteriophage homologous
recombination proteins mediate annealing of ssDNAs to their genomic
targets. Experiments targeting selective phenotypic markers are screened
and identified by plating the cells on differential medias. Each cycle
ultimately takes 2.5 hours to process, with additional time required to
grow isogenic cultures and characterize mutations. By iteratively
introducing libraries of mutagenic ssDNAs targeting multiple sites, MAGE
can generate combinatorial genetic diversity in a cell population.
There can be up to 50 genome edits, from single nucleotide base pairs to
whole genome or gene networks simultaneously with results in a matter
of days.
MAGE experiments can be divided into three classes, characterized
by varying degrees of scale and complexity: (i) many target sites,
single genetic mutations; (ii) single target site, many genetic
mutations; and (iii) many target sites, many genetic mutations. An example of class three was reflected in 2009, where Church and colleagues were able to program Escherichia coli
to produce five times the normal amount of lycopene, an antioxidant
normally found in tomato seeds and linked to anti-cancer properties.
They applied MAGE to optimize the 1-deoxy-d-xylulose-5-phosphate (DXP)
metabolic pathway in Escherichia coli to overproduce isoprenoid
lycopene. It took them about 3 days and just over $1,000 in materials.
The ease, speed, and cost efficiency in which MAGE can alter genomes can
transform how industries approach the manufacturing and production of
important compounds in the bioengineering, bioenergy, biomedical
engineering, synthetic biology, pharmaceutical, agricultural, and
chemical industries.
Applications
As of 2012 efficient genome editing had been developed for a wide
range of experimental systems ranging from plants to animals, often
beyond clinical interest, and was becoming a standard experimental
strategy in research labs. The recent generation of rat, zebrafish, maize and tobacco
ZFN-mediated mutants and the improvements in TALEN-based approaches
testify to the significance of the methods, and the list is expanding
rapidly. Genome editing with engineered nucleases will likely contribute
to many fields of life sciences from studying gene functions in plants
and animals to gene therapy in humans. For instance, the field of synthetic biology
which aims to engineer cells and organisms to perform novel functions,
is likely to benefit from the ability of engineered nuclease to add or
remove genomic elements and therefore create complex systems. In addition, gene functions can be studied using stem cells with engineered nucleases.
Listed below are some specific tasks this method can carry out:
- Targeted gene mutation
- Gene therapy
- Creating chromosome rearrangement
- Study gene function with stem cells
- Transgenic animals
- Endogenous gene labeling
- Targeted transgene addition
Targeted gene modification in animals
The
combination of recent discoveries in genetic engineering, particularly
gene editing and the latest improvement in bovine reproduction
technologies (e.g. in vitro embryo culture) allows for genome
editing directly in fertilised oocytes using synthetic highly specific
endonucleases. RNA-guided endonucleases:clustered regularly interspaced
short palindromic repeats associated Cas9 (CRISPR/Cas9) are a new tool,
further increasing the range of methods available. In particular
CRISPR/Cas9 engineered endonucleases allows the use of multiple guide
RNAs for simultaneous Knockouts (KO) in one step by cytoplasmic direct
injection (CDI) on mammalian zygotes.
Thanks to the parallel development of single-cell
transcriptomics, genome editing and new stem cell models we are now
entering a scientifically exciting period where functional genetics is
no longer restricted to animal models but can be performed directly in
human samples. Single-cell gene expression analysis has resolved a
transcriptional road-map of human development from which key candidate
genes are being identified for functional studies. Using global
transcriptomics data to guide experimentation, the CRISPR based genome
editing tool has made it feasible to disrupt or remove key genes in
order to elucidate function in a human setting.
Targeted gene modification in plants
Genome editing using Meganuclease,
ZFNs, and TALEN provides a new strategy for genetic manipulation in
plants and are likely to assist in the engineering of desired plant
traits by modifying endogenous genes. For instance, site-specific gene
addition in major crop species can be used for 'trait stacking' whereby
several desired traits are physically linked to ensure their
co-segregation during the breeding processes. Progress in such cases have been recently reported in Arabidopsis thaliana and Zea mays. In Arabidopsis thaliana,
using ZFN-assisted gene targeting, two herbicide-resistant genes
(tobacco acetolactate synthase SuRA and SuRB) were introduced to SuR
loci with as high as 2% transformed cells with mutations.
In Zea mays, disruption of the target locus was achieved by ZFN-induced
DSBs and the resulting NHEJ. ZFN was also used to drive
herbicide-tolerance gene expression cassette (PAT) into the targeted endogenous locus IPK1 in this case.
Such genome modification observed in the regenerated plants has been
shown to be inheritable and was transmitted to the next generation.
A potentially successful example of the application of genome editing
techniques in crop improvement can be found in banana, where scientists
used CRISPR/Cas9 editing to inactivate the endogenous banana streak virus in the B genome of banana (Musa spp.) to overcome a major challenge in banana breeding.
In addition, TALEN-based genome engineering has been extensively tested and optimized for use in plants. TALEN fusions have also been used by a U.S. food ingredient company, Calyxt, to improve the quality of soybean oil products and to increase the storage potential of potatoes.
Several optimizations need to be made in order to improve editing plant genomes using ZFN-mediated targeting.
There is a need for reliable design and subsequent test of the
nucleases, the absence of toxicity of the nucleases, the appropriate
choice of the plant tissue for targeting, the routes of induction of
enzyme activity, the lack of off-target mutagenesis, and a reliable detection of mutated cases.
A common delivery method for CRISPR/Cas9 in plants is Agrobacterium-based transformation. T-DNA is introduced directly into the plant genome by a T4SS mechanism. Cas9 and gRNA-based expression cassettes are turned into Ti plasmids, which are transformed in Agrobacterium for plant application. To improve Cas9 delivery in live plants, viruses are being used more effective transgene delivery.
Research
Gene therapy
The ideal gene therapy
practice is that which replaces the defective gene with a normal allele
at its natural location. This is advantageous over a virally delivered
gene as there is no need to include the full coding sequences and
regulatory sequences when only a small proportions of the gene needs to
be altered as is often the case.
The expression of the partially replaced genes is also more consistent
with normal cell biology than full genes that are carried by viral
vectors.
The first clinical use of TALEN-based genome editing was in the treatment of CD19+ acute lymphoblastic leukemia in an 11-month old child in 2015. Modified donor T cells were engineered to attack the leukemia cells, to be resistant to Alemtuzumab, and to evade detection by the host immune system after introduction.
Extensive research has been done in cells and animals using
CRISPR-Cas9 to attempt to correct genetic mutations which cause genetic
diseases such as Down syndrome, spina bifida, anencephaly, and Turner
and Klinefelter syndromes.
In February 2019, medical scientists working with Sangamo Therapeutics, headquartered in Richmond, California, announced the first ever "in body" human gene editing therapy to permanently alter DNA - in a patient with Hunter Syndrome. Clinical trials by Sangamo involving gene editing using Zinc Finger Nuclease (ZFN) are ongoing.
Eradicating diseases
Researchers have used CRISPR-Cas9 gene drives to modify genes associated with sterility in A. gambiae, the vector for malaria. This technique has further implications in eradicating other vector borne diseases such as yellow fever, dengue, and Zika.
The CRISPR-Cas9 system can be programmed to modulate the
population of any bacterial species by targeting clinical genotypes or
epidemiological isolates. It can selectively enable the beneficial
bacterial species over the harmful ones by eliminating pathogen, which
gives it an advantage over broad-spectrum antibiotics.
Antiviral applications for therapies targeting human viruses such
as HIV, herpes, and hepatitis B virus are under research. CRISPR can be
used to target the virus or the host to disrupt genes encoding the
virus cell-surface receptor proteins. In November 2018, He Jiankui announced that he had edited two human embryos, to attempt to disable the gene for CCR5, which codes for a receptor that HIV uses to enter cells. He said that twin girls, Lulu and Nana, had been born a few weeks earlier. He said that the girls still carried functional copies of CCR5 along with disabled CCR5 (mosaicism) and were still vulnerable to HIV. The work was widely condemned as unethical, dangerous, and premature.
In January 2019, scientists in China reported the creation of five identical cloned gene-edited monkeys, using the same cloning technique that was used with Zhong Zhong and Hua Hua – the first ever cloned monkeys - and Dolly the sheep, and the same gene-editing Crispr-Cas9 technique allegedly used by He Jiankui in creating the first ever gene-modified human babies Lulu and Nana. The monkey clones were made in order to study several medical diseases.
In the near future the new CRISPR system will also be able to
eradicate diseases and conditions that humans are predisposed for. With
this new technology scientists will be able to take the genes of a human
sperm cell and egg, and replace the genes that activate cancer or other
abnormal or unwanted defects. This will take the stress off of parents
worrying about having a child and them not being able to live it like a
normal child should. After just one generation of this process, the
entire future of the human race would never have to worry about the
problems of deformities or predisposed conditions.
Prospects and limitations
In
the future, an important goal of research into genome editing with
engineered nucleases must be the improvement of the safety and
specificity of the nucleases. For example, improving the ability to
detect off-target events can improve our ability to learn about ways of
preventing them. In addition, zinc-fingers used in ZFNs are seldom
completely specific, and some may cause a toxic reaction. However, the
toxicity has been reported to be reduced by modifications done on the
cleavage domain of the ZFN.
In addition, research by Dana Carroll into modifying the genome
with engineered nucleases has shown the need for better understanding of
the basic recombination and repair machinery of DNA. In the future, a
possible method to identify secondary targets would be to capture broken
ends from cells expressing the ZFNs and to sequence the flanking DNA
using high-throughput sequencing.
Because of the ease of use and cost-efficiency of CRISPR,
extensive research is currently being done on it. There are now more
publications on CRISPR than ZFN and TALEN despite how recent the
discovery of CRISPR is.
Both CRISPR and TALEN are favored to be the choices to be implemented
in large-scale productions due to their precision and efficiency.
Genome editing occurs also as a natural process without
artificial genetic engineering. The agents that are competent to edit
genetic codes are viruses or subviral RNA-agents.
Although GEEN has higher efficiency than many other methods in
reverse genetics, it is still not highly efficient; in many cases less
than half of the treated populations obtain the desired changes.
For example, when one is planning to use the cell's NHEJ to create a
mutation, the cell's HDR systems will also be at work correcting the DSB
with lower mutational rates.
Traditionally, mice have been the most common choice for
researchers as a host of a disease model. CRISPR can help bridge the gap
between this model and human clinical trials by creating transgenic
disease models in larger animals such as pigs, dogs, and non-human
primates.
Using the CRISPR-Cas9 system, the programmed Cas9 protein and the sgRNA
can be directly introduced into fertilized zygotes to achieve the
desired gene modifications when creating transgenic models in rodents.
This allows bypassing of the usual cell targeting stage in generating
transgenic lines, and as a result, it reduces generation time by 90%.
One potential that CRISPR brings with its effectiveness is the
application of xenotransplantation. In previous research trials, CRISPR
demonstrated the ability to target and eliminate endogenous
retroviruses, which reduces the risk of transmitting diseases and
reduces immune barriers. Eliminating these problems improves donor organ function, which brings this application closer to a reality.
In plants, genome editing is seen as a viable solution to the conservation of biodiversity. Gene drive are a potential tool to alter the reproductive rate of invasive species, although there are significant associated risks.
Human enhancement
Many transhumanists see genome editing as a potential tool for human enhancement. Australian biologist and Professor of Genetics David Andrew Sinclair
notes that "the new technologies with genome editing will allow it to
be used on individuals (...) to have (...) healthier children" – designer babies.
According to a September 2016 report by the Nuffield Council on
Bioethics in the future it may be possible to enhance people with genes
from other organisms or wholly synthetic genes to for example improve night vision and sense of smell.
The American National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Medicine issued a report in February 2017 giving qualified support to human genome editing.
They recommended that clinical trials for genome editing might one day
be permitted once answers have been found to safety and efficiency
problems "but only for serious conditions under stringent oversight."
Risks
In the 2016 Worldwide Threat Assessment of the US Intelligence Community statement United States Director of National Intelligence, James R. Clapper, named genome editing as a potential weapon of mass destruction,
stating that genome editing conducted by countries with regulatory or
ethical standards "different from Western countries" probably increases
the risk of the creation of harmful biological agents or products.
According to the statement the broad distribution, low cost, and
accelerated pace of development of this technology, its deliberate or
unintentional misuse might lead to far-reaching economic and national
security implications.
For instance technologies such as CRISPR could be used to make "killer
mosquitoes" that cause plagues that wipe out staple crops.
According to a September 2016 report by the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, the simplicity and low cost of tools to edit the genetic code will allow amateurs – or "biohackers" –
to perform their own experiments, posing a potential risk from the
release of genetically modified bugs. The review also found that the
risks and benefits of modifying a person's genome – and having those
changes pass on to future generations – are so complex that they demand
urgent ethical scrutiny. Such modifications might have unintended
consequences which could harm not only the child, but also their future
children, as the altered gene would be in their sperm or eggs. In 2001 Australian researchers Ronald Jackson and Ian Ramshaw were criticized for publishing a paper in the Journal of Virology that explored the potential control of mice, a major pest in Australia, by infecting them with an altered mousepox virus that would cause infertility as the provided sensitive information could lead to the manufacture of biological weapons by potential bioterrorists who might use the knowledge to create vaccine resistant strains of other pox viruses, such as smallpox, that could affect humans. Furthermore, there are additional concerns about the ecological risks of releasing gene drives into wild populations.