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CRISPR: A guide to the health revolution that will define the 21st century – BBC Science Focus Magazine

Posted: September 10, 2021 at 5:41 am

Scientists are a cautious bunch, fond of a caveat even when describing their own research. Our favourite expressions are Yes, but and On the other hand and It remains unclear says gene editor Dr Fyodor Urnov. So please add all of that to what Im about to say.

If CRISPR realises 10 per cent of what we practitioners of gene editing dream it to be able to do, it will rival the greatest advances in the history of biomedicine as a technology to impact public health.

Urnov is talking via a crackly Zoom link from his office at the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI) in Berkeley, California, which is at the forefront of what may prove to be the defining scientific breakthrough of the 21st Century.

CRISPR is a genome editing technology that allows scientists to cut DNA with incredible precision and insert or delete DNA to correct unwanted mutations. To oversimplify the technology, its the power to edit the building blocks of life, just like text on a computer screen. Not only could it enable scientists to switch off genes that lead to a broad spectrum of disease, but it will unshackle all of us from the genetics were born with.

The knowledge gained is amazing and its just really accelerated basic research. That in itself is already transformative, says Dr Robin Lovell-Badge, from the Crick Institute. And the notion that we can actually treat people with genetic diseases in a way that was never possible before is mind boggling.

For much of the past decade, the technology has been confined to the lab. Now, though, the first CRISPR therapies are changing the fate of people born with debilitating inherited conditions. Most of us havent realised it yet, but were in the foothills of a profound medical and technological revolution that raises not only the prospect of new treatments and cures, but also huge questions about ethics, equality and health justice.

The incoming wave of gene-editing applications has been compared to the Industrial Revolution or the birth of the internet in terms of the game-changing impact it will have on society.

Jennifer Doudna, who collaborated with Emmanuelle Charpentier on the development of CRISPR and founded the Innovative Genomics Institute IGI

Biochemist Dr Jennifer Doudna established the IGI to tackle all of that and more. As a non-profit organisation, the institute exists not just to research gene editing, but also make it affordable and accessible to everyone. Its a big claim, given the breadth of CRISPRs potential, so the IGIs leadership team agreed to give BBC Science Focus an exclusive overview of its efforts.

It was there on the Berkeley campus where Doudna and Dr Emmanuelle Charpentier changed the world nearly a decade ago. Their collaboration led to the development of CRISPR-Cas9, the gene-editing tool described in a landmark 2012 paper that won a Nobel Prize.

I think we both had a little sense of, you know, kind of a chill, she says. I still remember that feeling of hairs standing up on my neck, thinking theres something really interesting here. And I would wager that neither of us at the time had any idea where it would end up, because I dont think one ever does.

CRISPR isnt the only gene-editing technology, and the IGI is not the only institute pioneering the field of study. But CRISPR is more versatile, easier to use and cheaper than a lot of other technologies. And whats astonishing is the speed of progress. In less than a decade its gone from discovery to human trials and potential cures, something thats practically unheard of in biomedicine.

Its a little bit of whiplash, says Dr Brad Ringeisen, executive director of the IGI. Think about nanoparticles, the nano revolution. Pfizer has nanoparticles in their COVID mRNA vaccine, but that [technology] has taken 30 or 40 years.

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People born with sickle cell disease will be among the first to benefit from advances in gene editing. In 2019, a woman called Victoria Gray became one of the first people in the world to be treated for a genetically inherited disease with a CRISPR-based therapy.

Born with sickle cell anaemia, she required strong pain medication and regular blood transfusions to stave off the effects of the mutated gene that makes red blood cells warp and block the flow of blood and oxygen around the body. Aside from bouts of excruciating pain, sickle cell anaemia can lead to stroke, hypertension, organ damage and more.

The treatment was not simple. Doctors removed bone marrow cells from Gray and the other patients in the trial, then used CRISPR to edit a gene that activates production of foetal haemoglobin, a protein that can alleviate the symptoms of sickle cell disease. The patients then underwent chemotherapy to destroy most of their bone marrow, after which billions of edited cells were infused back into their bodies.

Victoria Gray, who volunteered to have her sickle cell anaemia treated with CRISPR-based therapy Sarah Cannon Research Institute

Gray no longer requires medication or transfusions, and neither do the other people in her trial, which included patients with a related blood disorder. It seems that a one-time CRISPR treatment has cured them.

Sickle cell disease is probably the easiest target that affects the most people, says Ringeisen. Its about as simple as you can possibly get: you go in and either turn on an alternative gene or you try to correct the one thing. One hundred thousand people in United States have sickle cell disease and I think its over a million people worldwide. So theres a huge impact that can be had.

The IGI is preparing its own sickle cell trial, but the institutes scope also includes many other conditions. As well as blood disorders, it has active research projects on autoimmune disease, neurological disease, cancer and COVID-19. One promising avenue of research is with T-cells, sometimes described as the troops on the ground of our immune system.

Dr Alex Marson, the IGIs director of human health, is running a lab that is working to engineer T-cells using CRISPR to treat different kinds of disease. He is currently planning a clinical trial with a family where a strong genetic mutation has caused different manifestations of autoimmune disease in the younger generation.

In the lab weve corrected cells from these children, he says. Now were working towards doing a clinical trial to take those gene-corrected T-cells and infuse them into at least one of these young adults to try to restore balance in the system and treat the autoimmune disease.

Whereas current T-cell therapies are wildly expensive, Marson envisions a future where off-the-shelf T-cells are manufactured to treat different kinds of disease, their production industrialised to a scale that makes them accessible to anybody who needs them.

Sickle cell disease causes the body to produce unusually shaped red blood cells. These cells do not live as long as other red blood cells and can block blood vessels, leading to problems Getty Images

We can treat infectious diseases by designing immune cells that recognise infections, he says. I think were going to have this sort of flexible ability to actually write the language of the DNA in the immune cell and use it in a drug platform.

This is where things start getting really interesting, because it showcases just how broad the medical applications of CRISPR will be. Its potential lies not just in those conditions caused by a single genetic mutation like sickle cell disease, but any disease that has a genetic component, either in terms of susceptibility or protection.

That includes many of the major killers, including cancer, cardiovascular disease and neurodegenerative disease, plus chronic conditions like inflammatory bowel disease and rheumatoid arthritis.

All disease is on the map, says Ringeisen.

Part of what gives scientists optimism is that gene editing can be used to bestow protective DNA on a person as well as correcting unwanted mutations.

We know there is a genetic change you can make that will dramatically lower your risk of heart disease, says Urnov. How do we know that? Because of very rare individuals who have those genetic changes. And when you study lots of them, its kind of jaw-dropping. Im not going to say theyre immune to heart disease, but theyre close to it.

Doudna believes that CRISPR could even be used more to prevent disease than to treat it. Imagine a time when people get their genome sequenced and be told that you have a gene that makes you have a higher likelihood of getting cardiovascular disease, she says. But you have the option of editing your cells so that you dont have to wait to find out if youre one of the unlucky folks that is susceptible.

Today, lots of us take preventative action to protect our future health. It could be anything from eating a high-fibre diet to keep heart disease at bay, to having a double mastectomy because breast cancer runs in the family. Would you be comfortable editing your DNA to achieve the same results?

Its harder to do the cost-benefit analysis when youre talking about such experimental therapies. There are some who will say that any form of gene editing is playing God and conspiracy theories around COVID-19 vaccines show how mistrust in new technologies can spread.

There can be misrepresentations or just misconceptions embedded in the public mindset that can have a negative effect on what I think should be positive advances, Doudna says. Another example of that is the whole anti-GMO movement.

In November 2018, twin girls were born in China, the so-called CRISPR babies. Biophysicist Dr He Jiankui announced that he had created the worlds first genome-edited babies to widespread condemnation.

Chinese scientist He Jiankui hit the headlines in 2018 for using CRISPR to create the first genetically edited human babies. The press coverage soon turned sour when it emerged that the experiments had been carried out in an unethical, irresponsible manner. Jiankui is now serving a three-year prison sentence Shutterstock

He engineered mutations in human embryos that were later implanted into a woman, crossing an ethical boundary by altering the human germline, meaning the edits he made would also be passed on to future generations. Additionally, he was criticised for flouting normal safety procedures.

Jiankui claimed that he had disabled a gene called CCR5, offering protection against HIV. His critics pointed out that he could have also inadvertently caused mutations in other parts of the genome. Jiankui was jailed in China for three years at the beginning of 2020 and ordered to pay a three million yuan fine (240,000 approx), his work a stark warning to everyone in the gene-editing world.

This field is experimental and we are one severe adverse event from the entire effort being frozen, Urnov says. The painful thing for me and for tens of thousands of folks like me who have spent 40 years building human genetic engineering to treat disease, you know, this technologys now tainted with the concept of designer babies.

We have 250 million people on planet Earth with genetic disease. We should not be talking about designing anyone. We should be putting all of our attention to the fact that there are hundreds of millions of our fellow human beings that have had their fate handed to them on genetic platter, he adds.

There are other challenges to overcome, too. One of the major criticisms of Jiankuis work stems from the fact that gene editing is not yet so precise that scientists haveabsolute faith that any edit only affects the part of the genome being targeted. There can be so-called off-target effects: unintended genetic modification that occurs elsewhere on the target genome. A worst-case scenario in clinical terms might be genotoxicity, where an off-target effect causes DNA damage that could lead to cancer.

For this reason, whats known as the delivery challenge of CRISPR is a major focus of research, both at the IGI and beyond.

Emmanuelle Charpentier, who worked with Jennifer Doudna on the development of CRISPR Alamy

We can only gain confidence in the safety of these procedures by performing clinical trials, says Dr Ross Wilson, the IGIs director of therapeutic delivery. We are not so hubristic to think that we have the ability to forecast every possible outcome when a new therapeutic procedure is attempted, which is why these trials are being performed methodically and without haste.

Once we have confidence that peoples lives are being saved or transformed for the better, without incurring unwanted outcomes, the technology can be moved into other applications, reducing risks of heart disease, for example.

There are ways to offset this risk of unintended consequences of gene editing. A patients own cells can be sent to the lab for trial editing, giving an informed look at what is likely to happen inside that patients body when they are dosed.

CRISPRoff technology is also under development. This tool allows researchers to target the epigenome, rather than the genome itself. That is, scientists can turn off a particular gene without cutting a strand of DNA by instead targeting the proteins and other molecules that attach themselves to DNA and control when that gene is switched on or off. Because the genome itself is untouched, researchers expect the risk of unwanted effects to be lower.

The pandemic taught us that the public has a major craving for things to be declared safe or unsafe, but in reality its all about the balance between risk and benefit, says Wilson. That ratio looks extremely promising for CRISPR technology, and it improves each year, so the future is bright for therapeutic genome editing.

Doudnas dream for CRISPR is to make it the standard of medical care. For that to happen, one more thing needs to be addressed, and its arguably more complex than any technical hurdle: the cost of treatment.

Gene editing is, or could be, a great leveller in healthcare. But like all experimental treatments, it is research-heavy, labour-intensive and expensive. One of Doudnas fears is that it will become a boutique technology, available only to those who can afford it. This, she says, would not only exacerbate the health gap that already exists between rich and poor, but also create a new kind of health inequality: a gene gap.

The IGI is a non-profit, funded publicly and via philanthropy. Its staff talk of their work not just in technological terms but societal ones too, focused on how to maximise the reach of the technology.

Its a major problem, Urnov says. In the US, [some of] these medicines are sold for $2m, but European countries have refused to even licence them. You have a surreal situation where parents in Europe, whose children have these severe diseases, start GoFundMe campaigns to be able to pay American prices.

We have this gap between the fact that this technology is rapidly expanding in its utility and we are struggling, frankly, with how to make it equitable and affordable.

Add to that the issue of health justice, the fact that if youre born with an inherited condition, an affordable cure may be possible if enough people have the same illness. That would make it economically viable for pharmaceutical companies to invest in the research to develop new treatments.

T-cells (orange) are an important part of the immune system. Scientists could use CRISPR to modify the cells so they could potentially lead to treatments for cancer (blue), cardiovascular disease and arthritis Science Photo Library

If youre born with a rare genetic mutation, that may not be possible. There is this horrific gap between our ability to read that persons DNA and say, Yes, this is the mutation that killed your mom and will kill you, Im sorry to say, and actually developing a treatment that would help that person. Developing such personalised cures has essentially no commercial value. Nobody will ever make money, says Urnov.

Lovell-Badge agrees. The cost is a problem for it becoming really useful for public health, he says. [We need to] start off from the very beginning thinking, How can we do this in a way thats going to be more affordable? Then you approach the problem in a different way.

Unlike so much of the biotech industry, addressing this issue is a cornerstone that the IGI was built on not just developing novel treatments, but creating scalable pipelines for discovery, testing and rollout.

Our mission really has to be ensuring that technology benefits everyone, Doudna says. That was the impetus for the Innovative Genomics Institute in the first place. Many institutes, many companies, many academic labs are now developing gene editing, but not with an eye towards controlling cost and doing the science with a focus on public access to that technology. Thats really our purpose.

The genetic revolution is coming. After pioneering the technology, Doudna is adamant that when it arrives, its available to everybody. As more than one of her colleagues tells us, thats just in her DNA.

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CRISPR: A guide to the health revolution that will define the 21st century - BBC Science Focus Magazine

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Synthetic biology makes ecologists dream … and tremble : – The Tico Times

Posted: at 5:41 am

The film Jurassic Park (1993) made human beings dream of the possibility of resurrecting species. Almost three decades later, synthetic biology is nearly here not to rescue extinct dinosaurs, but to exterminate harmful animals.

Steven Spielbergs blockbuster film set the action on an imaginary island in Costa Rica (though it was inspired by Cocos Island).

And it is precisely on an island where the first scientific experiments could one day occur, perhaps in the next decade, according to experts and activists at the World Conservation Congress.

80% of the islands in the world share the same problem: mice. They infest crops, eat bird eggs and endanger the fragile local ecosystem.

For more than 25 years, the organization Island Conservation has been dedicated to eradicating invasive species, explains Royden Saah, representative of the organization at the Marseille congress, to AFP.

One of its latest successes was in two of the Galapagos Islands, North Seymour and the islet of Mosquera, using drones and baits. But it is an expensive and uncertain task, and the use of rodenticides can cause collateral damage.

Should we create a genetically modified mouse so that its future generations are exclusively male (or female)? asks Island Conservation on its website.

Saah coordinates a team of researchers, GBIRd, with institutions in the United States, Australia and New Zealand.

We dont have the mouse yet the conservation scientist says. But if we dont investigate, we wont be able to know the potential of this technology.

Saah points out that scientists will only perform experiments in countries interested in the technology.

With synthetic biology coming ever-closer to reality, the more than 1,400 members of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) four years ago created a working group on the issue.

The result is a Charter of Principles on the use of synthetic biology (which includes genetic engineering) that must be voted on this week in Marseille.

The draft of the Charter reaffirms the right of any country to prohibit these activities by appealing to the precautionary principle.

Participants in the debates at the Marseille congress agreed the questions regarding synthetic biology are considerable.

I am also afraid of the potential applications of synthetic biology declared the head of the working group, Kent Redford, when presenting the groups conclusions in Marseille.

There are obvious ecological risks and concerns about genetic modifications of wild species, warns Ricarda Steinbrecher, geneticist and scientific advisor of the NGO ProNatura.

ProNatura and Friends of the Earth are some of the NGOs that have sounded the alarm in Marseille. The Charter of Principles has not been sufficiently debated, they believe.

Among other reasons, scientists dont even agree on the exact frontiers of synthetic biology.

Does a modified mouse still belong to its original species, or does it create a new one?

One of the examples proposed by scientists in favor of experimentation is to recreate the material of a rhinoceros horn, so that this animal can escape extinction.

I have not found anything that prevents further investigation, Saah says about synthetic biology.

The debate is intense, but the situation in some places is just as pressing.

Samuel Gon, science advisor for the Nature Conservancy in Hawaii, says he cant wait.

Synthetic biology is not an option. It will not arrive in time to save the birds of the islands, he explained to AFP.

Of the more than 50 endemic species of honeybirds that were known in Hawaii, only about 15 remain, five in a critical state of extinction.

Historically, Hawaii didnt have mosquitoes. When they were introduced, beginning in the 19th century, some were carrying malaria a disease that has devastated local bird populations.

Hawaiian conservation authorities are preparing to use a known technique to sterilize mosquitoes by inoculating them with a bacterium, Wolbachia.

Beyond the ecological urgency, some scientists seem irresistibly drawn to bigger dreams.

A few months ago a group of researchers claimed that they had achieved the complete sequence of the genome of a million-year-old mammoth.

The technical challenges to achieve the reliable sequence of the genome of extinct species are immense, warns the report of the IUCN experts.

Steinbrecher is even more emphatic. We have to accept that some species have gone extinct, however disappointing it may be. The main objective is to preserve what we already have.

The featured photo shows Costa Ricas Cocos Island. Photo is used for illustrative purposes.

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Synthetic biology makes ecologists dream ... and tremble : - The Tico Times

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Letter to the editor: No exemptions on genetically-engineered foods and plants – BayToday.ca

Posted: at 5:41 am

People want to know that all genetically engineered foods have been rigorously assessed for safety by Health Canada, including any new gene-edited foods

Dear Editor,

Many Canadians may not be aware that Health Canada is proposing to remove regulation from most new genetically engineered foods. Local candidates in the federal election may not even be aware!

Health Canada is proposing to let some new genetically engineered foods onto the market without any government safety checks. In fact, companies wouldnt even have to tell Health Canada that these new foods exist. Many of these unregulated foods would be produced by the new genetic engineering techniques called gene editing. But gene-edited foods need to be carefully assessed by our government, not just left to companies to evaluate safety.

Mandatory government safety assessments for all genetically engineered foods are necessary. People want to know that all genetically engineered foods have been rigorously assessed for safety by Health Canada, including any new gene-edited foods. Private companies cannot be trusted to test for safety properly!

We need transparency, independent science, and government oversight! Information and analysis by the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network are available here.

Sincerely,Julie Dupuis

Noelville

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SpaceX Tourists’ Mission Simulation Included Life-Threatening Situation – Futurism

Posted: at 5:33 am

"There is like a chance that this might not be actually a survivable situation."Space Training

Next week, SpaceX is about to make historyby sending the first all-civilian crew into Earths orbit for a three day joyride.

But while the crew of four didnt have to go through years of NASA astronaut training, they were still put through the ringer ahead of their journey into space. As Axios reports, that included a grueling 30-hour simulation that mimicked a near-disaster a sign that the team left no stones unturned in the exhaustive preparation process.

The last 45 minutes, there was awareness from us in the capsule and them on the ground There is like a chance that this might not be actually a survivable situation, mission lead and billionaire funder of the expedition Jared Isaacman told the site.

The simulation took place inside a full-scale Dragon spacecraft mockup at SpaceX HQ in Hawthorne, California, according to Axios.

During their stint inside the simulator, the crew had to endure launch delays caused by weather and eat the foods theyll consume while orbiting the Earth.

Most harrowingly, the 30-hour simulation almost ended in simulated disaster.

But thanks to their training, the crew managed to get back down to the simulated surface below in one piece.

Other than experiencing the shock of almost dying inside a simulation of their upcoming journey, the rest of their trip sounds a bit like a long-haul flight.

The team is planning on eating cold pizza alongside other fresh foods during their first day, according to Axios. During training, they were even able to pick their choice of movies to watch if they get bored of watching the Earth rotate below out of the spacecrafts 360-degree glass cupola.

Given the circumstances, though, wed suggest staying away from Gravity.

READ MORE: What it takes to train for space [Axios]

More on the trip: SpaceX Rocket for First All-Tourist Spaceflight Rolls to Launchpad

Futurism Readers: Find out how much you could save by switching to solar power at UnderstandSolar.com. By signing up through this link, Futurism.com may receive a small commission.

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Karen Miga Fills In the Missing Pieces of Our Genome – Quanta Magazine

Posted: at 5:28 am

In 1990, an international team of scientists began an ambitious attempt to sequence the human genome. By 2001 the Human Genome Project (HGP) had prepared a rough draft, and in April 2003, the draft sequence was declared finished. But Karen Miga, a geneticist now at the University of California, Santa Cruz and the associate director of the UCSC Genomics Institute, knew that while the work might have wrapped up, the sequencing was far from complete.

The HGP was able to sequence the 90% of human DNA that geneticists call euchromatin, which is loosely folded and contains nearly all of the genes that are actively making proteins. But Miga specialized in heterochromatin, the tightly packed sections of DNA with highly repetitive sequences near the ends (telomeres) and centers (centromeres) of chromosomes. At the time, scientists couldnt sequence heterochromatin, so despite the celebratory hubbub and champagne toasts, almost 10% of the genome went unsequenced.

It stayed that way for almost 20 years. The problem nagged at Miga, in part because she didnt believe that the regions were as unimportant as some geneticists thought. (Without a sequence, how could you tell?) Over the years, Miga continued to push the genomics field to complete the project they had started so many years before. As DNA sequencing technologies enabled researchers to read longer and longer stretches of the genome in one go, Miga could see that scientists were inching closer to the possibility of cracking the problem open.

Together with Adam Phillippy, a computational biologist at the National Human Genome Research Institute, Miga launched the Telomere-to-Telomere (T2T) consortium in 2018 to finally sequence every last nucleotide of human DNA. Then, just as the team was finding its footing, the pandemic struck.

But COVID-19 didnt stop their progress. In June, Miga, Phillippy and their colleagues published the first complete genome sequence on the preprint server biorxiv.org. Three decades after it began, the human genome was finally complete.

Quanta sat down with Miga in a video chat to discuss her years of work and what the consortiums accomplishment might mean for science. The interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.

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Karen Miga Fills In the Missing Pieces of Our Genome - Quanta Magazine

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New Class of Transposon-Encoded RNA-Guided Nucleases May Add to Genome Editing Toolbox – GenomeWeb

Posted: at 5:28 am

NEW YORK A team of US researchers led by the Broad Institute's Feng Zhang has discovered a new class of transposon-encoded RNA-guided DNA nucleases, which they said could be used for genome editing in human cells and hold potential for biotechnology.

In a paper published on Thursday in Science, the researchers wrote that the IscB proteins which are the likely ancestors of the RNA-guided endonuclease Cas9 are putative nucleases encoded in a distinct family of IS200/IS605 transposons. Using evolutionary analysis, RNA-seq, and biochemical experiments, they reconstructed the evolution of CRISPR-Cas9 systems from IS200/IS605 transposons and showed that IscB utilized a single non-coding RNA for RNA-guided cleavage of double-stranded DNA.

The researchers also experimented with the RNA-guided nuclease activity of TnpB, another IS200/605 transposon-encoded protein and the likely ancestor of Cas12 endonucleases. Overall, they said, this work revealed a widespread class of transposon-encoded RNA-guided nucleases, which they named OMEGA, for Obligate Mobile Element Guided Activity.

IscB is about 400 amino acids long and has an architecture similar to that of Cas9 it contains an RuvC endonuclease domain split by the insertion of a bridge helix as well as an HNH endonuclease domain. When the researchers performed a comprehensive search for proteins containing an HNH or a split RuvC endonuclease domain, they found that Cas9 and IscB were the only proteins that contained both domains. Clustering and phylogenetic analyses of the combined RuvC, BH, and HNH domains strongly suggested that all extant Cas9s descended from a single ancestral IscB.

Using a previously established protospacer adjacent motif (PAM)-discovery assay, they further observed that CRISPR-associated IscBs are reprogrammable RNA-guided nucleases. Additional experiments showed that IscB functionally associated with CRISPR at least once, and likely on additional occasions, suggesting that IscB systems more generally shared a core ancestral ncRNA gene that was prone to evolving into a CRISPR array or a separate trans-acting tracrRNA.

The researchers also investigated the evolutionary relationships between IscB, Cas9, and other homologous proteins to gain a broader insight into the evolution of RNA-guided mechanisms. In searching for proteins containing split RuvC domains, they detected another group of shorter IscB homologs that were about 350 amino acids long and were also encoded in IS200/605 superfamily transposons. They renamed these proteins IsrB (Insertion sequence RuvC-like OrfB).

In addition to IscB and IsrB, they further identified a family of even smaller (about 180 amino acids) proteins that only contained the PLMP domain and HNH domain but no RuvC domain, which they named IshB (Insertion sequence HNH-like OrfB).

In investigating the relationships between these proteins, they found that IsrB, IscB, and Cas9 formed distinct, strongly supported clades, suggesting that each of these nucleases originated from a unique evolutionary event. Additionally, they were able to identify two distinct groups of Cas9s. The first was a new subtype called II-D a group of relatively small Cas9s about 700 amino acids long that are not associated with any other known cas genes. The second is a distinct clade branching from within the II-C subtype, which includes exceptionally large Cas9s (more than 1,700 amino acids) that are associated with tnpA.

"Through the exploration of Cas9 evolution, we discovered the programmable RNA-guided mechanism of three highly abundant but previously uncharacterized transposon-encoded nucleases: IscB, IsrB, and TnpB, which we collectively refer to as OMEGA because the mobile element localization and movement likely determines the identity of their guides," the authors concluded. "Although the biological functions of [OMEGA] systems remain unknown, several hypotheses are compatible with the available evidence, including roles in facilitating TnpA-catalyzed, RNA-guided transposition, or acting as a toxin."

They further noted that the TnpB family is far more abundant and diverse than the IscB family, and that TnpBs might represent a vast diversity of RNA-guided mechanisms present not only in prokaryotes, but also in eukaryotes.

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UB team proposes genome ‘archipelago’ as new model of how genomic information influences development, disease – UB Now: News and views for UB faculty…

Posted: at 5:28 am

A UB team has developed a new model of how information in the genome is organized, called the novel genome archipelago model (GAM). The model provides new insights into how a multitude of interactions among genes may affect normal development, as well as mutations that lead to cancer and other diseases.

GAM offers a physical basis for the idea of systems genomics, which has begun to emerge in recent years, in which individual genome elements are integrated into an organism-like entity, says Michal K. Stachowiak, professor in the Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences at UB.

Stachowiak is senior author on thepaper that describes the GAM, which was published in a special edition of the International Journal of Molecular Sciences entitled Molecular Mechanisms of Neural Stem Cells Systems Approach.

The study advances the idea that the GAM is created through the interactions of distant chromosome regions and even different chromosomes.

Stachowiak says the study shows that tens of thousands of genes may engage in hundreds of millions of interactions, and that through these associations, genomic function is executed.

This vast interactome, as we call it, truly constitutes a new code for the information that is stored and executed by the genome, he says.

The interactions were mapped by first author Brandon Decker when he was working in Stachowiaks laboratory as a graduate student in UBs Genetics, Genomics and Bioinformatics program. Decker is now a postdoctoral associate at the National Institute on Aging, part of the National Institutes of Health.

Stachowiak explains that the GAM is based on the idea that the genome is an archipelago of constantly changing islands, and that when the islands form, they provide a blueprint for specific parts of the body and specific functions.

A single small mutation may have broad impact on genomic function by disrupting multi-genome interactions or their control mechanism, he says. It is the understanding of these interactions that may bring our therapeutic efforts to new, unprecedented levels.

Stachowiak says they assign the central role in organizing the GAM to a nuclear form of the protein FGFR1, which, through its Integrative Nuclear FGFR1 Signaling (INFS) mechanism, discovered in his lab, offers a new paradigm for genomic regulation of an organisms development. He notes that recent studies by teams at other institutions have shown that INFS plays an important role in cancers, including breast cancer.

This is an example of how an advanced basic science becomes translated into clinical medicine andmay offer new strategies for cancer treatments, he says.

Stachowiak named his model to reflect his lifelong inspiration by the travels of Charles Darwin, who developed his theory of evolution after happening upon the islands of Galapagos. We refer to different islands that form in the cell nucleus and, as we propose, orchestrate ontogenesis, Stachowiak says.

In addition to Decker and Stachowiak, other UB authors are Yongho Bae and Ewa Stachowiak, both of the Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences; Josep M. Jornet, associate professor of electrical engineering at Northeastern University; and Donald Yergeau, associate director of genomic technologies in UBs New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences.

Co-authors are Hussam Abdellatif, a doctoral student at the Institute for the Wireless Internet of Things at Northeastern University, who trained with Jornet, and Michal Liput, a doctoral student at the Mossakowski Medical Research Center, Polish Academy of Sciences, who trained with Stachowiak at UB.

This research was funded by three consecutive grants from the National Science Foundation, with additional support from New York State Department of Health and the Patrick P. Lee Foundation.

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UB team proposes genome 'archipelago' as new model of how genomic information influences development, disease - UB Now: News and views for UB faculty...

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Genome Sequencing Results Show that SARS-CoV2 is Picking Up New Mutations in Karnataka | The Weather Channel – Articles from The Weather Channel |…

Posted: at 5:27 am

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A genomic sequencing report submitted to the Karnataka government has suggested that the SARS-CoV-2 virus is changing. Currently, the Delta and sub-lineages of Delta are spreading across Bengaluru Urban and picking up new mutations.

The report said that of these mutations, the N439 mutant has already exhibited the potential to increase the fitness of the virus.

The report cautioned: "We need to monitor any increase in the frequency of these mutations. As that might be a signal for a new variant, which may not be covered by the protection from vaccines," the report quoted in bold letters.

This report comes ahead of a similar account of results of 300 samples sent for genomic sequencing that is expected to be released soon. The results will be discussed by the Committee for COVID-19 Whole Genome Sequencing (WGS), which is to meet on Thursday for discussing the findings.

Strand Precision Medicine Sciences, a genomics-based research and diagnostics company mandated to conduct genomic sequencing by the Karnataka government to help detect trends in mutations, has submitted its report to the health ministry on September 1.

The report has also been sent to the Karnataka Covid Task Force, Chairman of Genomic Surveillance Committee, Karnataka; Bruhat Bengaluru Mahanagara Palike (BBMP) Commissioner and health commissioner BBMP.

Samples processed include 34 sequences from children, 28 sequences from partially and fully vaccinated individuals, and 6 from fully vaccinated individuals. The investigations were conducted on 298 complete sequences.

The outputs suggested the identification of four lineages, and all were Delta or sub-lineages of Delta. The report also said three lineages of Delta and two sub-lineages of Delta AY.4 and AY.12 were found across all groups of Bengaluru Urban.

The report also spoke about new mutations. "This sequencing showed 133 mutations in spike protein alone. Many of these are known mutations," the report said.

"We found several new mutations at low frequency (0.3%

N439K mutant found in 7 sequences, N440Y/T/F mutant in 8 sequences, L441Y/S/G/A/C/D/V found in 7 sequences, D4421/V/Y/F in 9 sequences, S443E/V/Y/W/F in 7 sequences, K444F/N/V/T/S/V mutants found in 7 sequences.

However, experts opine that genomic sequencing results are not a cause for worry as most samples are collected from persons treated at home.

Strand Precision Medicine Solutions was tasked with studying mutations through genome sequencing by the Covid Task Force in Karnataka. The sequencing indicated 30% mutation in the Delta AY.4 variant and 3% in AY.12 mutant.

Total 298 swabs were collected from COVID-19 patients in Bengaluru for genomic sequencing. It also showed that Delta and its sub-lineages AY4 & A12 were dominant across different age groups in Bengaluru.

The test also showed that the COVID-19 virus was changing and Delta's sub-lineages are spreading across Bengaluru urban areas with new mutations being reported.

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The above article has been published from a wire agency with minimal modifications to the headline and text.

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Dark regions of the genome may drive the evolution of new species – Livescience.com

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Genetic "dark matter" may drive the emergence of new species, new research finds.

These long, repeating stretches of the genome, called satellite DNA, may ultimately prevent incompatible animals from mating by scrambling the chromosomes in their hybrid babies, according to the study. And if animals from different populations can't mate, they will diverge over time, leading to speciation.

Just 1% of the 3 billion letters, or nucleotides, in the human genome make the proteins that determine traits such as eye color and height. Other stretches of DNA may tell the body how many copies of a protein to make, or turn genes on or off in different tissues, among other functions. Yet nearly 10% of the human genome is composed of long, repeating stretches of satellite DNA that, for many years, scientists didn't think did much of anything, said study co-author Madhav Jagannathan, currently an assistant professor at the ETH Zurich Institute of Biochemistry in Switzerland.

Related: Genes of 500-million-year-old sea monsters live inside us

"Satellite DNA repeats were very abundant in species and widely observed in eukaryotes," or life-forms with cell nuclei, Jagannathan told Live Science in an email. "Despite this, they were largely dismissed as junk DNA."

However, in a 2018 study, Jagannathan, who was then at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and his former postdoctoral adviser, biologist Yukiko Yamashita, also at MIT, discovered that some of this DNA served a critical purpose: It organizes DNA within a cell's nucleus. That study found that certain proteins grab DNA molecules and arrange them in densely packed bundles of chromosomes called chromocenters. Satellite DNA, they found, tells these grabby proteins how to bundle and organize chromosomes.

In the newest study, published July 24 in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution, Jagannathan and Yamashita found another role for satellite DNA: driving speciation. The team was investigating fertility in the fruit-fly species Drosophila melanogaster. When the researchers deleted a gene that codes for a protein called prod, which binds to satellite DNA to form chromocenters, the flies' chromosomes scattered outside the nucleus. Without the ability to correctly organize chromosomes, the flies died.

This was fascinating, Jagannathan said, because the deleted protein is unique to D. melanogaster. That meant that these rapidly evolving satellite DNA sequences must also have rapidly evolving proteins that bind to them.

To test this idea, Jagannathan bred D. melanogaster females with males of a different species, Drosophila simulans. As expected, the hybrids did not live long. When the researchers looked into the flies' cells, they saw misshapen nuclei with DNA scattered throughout the cells, just as they had when they deleted the prod protein in previous experiments.

So why does that mean satellite DNA could drive speciation? The team suspects that, if satellite DNA evolves quickly and two creatures make different satellite-DNA-binding proteins, they won't produce healthy offspring. As chromocenter binding proteins and satellite DNA segments evolve differently in separate populations or species, this incompatibility could arise rather quickly.

To test this hypothesis, they mutated satellite DNA-binding genes that led to the incompatibility in both parents. When they rewrote the flies' genomes to be compatible, they produced healthy hybrids.

Such satellite DNA disagreements could be a big factor in the evolution of new species, Jagannathan suspects. He hopes further research can test their model of hybrid incompatibility with other species. Ultimately, this research could lead to a way for scientists to rescue "doomed" hybrids, or hybrids that don't survive long after birth. This could pave the way for using hybridization as a method for rescuing critically endangered species, such as the Northern White Rhino, of which only two females survive.

Ultimately, the new research confirmed Jagannathan's hunch that satellite DNA served a purpose.

"I thought that there was no way evolution could be so wasteful," Jagannathan said.

Originally published on Live Science.

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New regulatory regions uncovered on the human genome – Lab + Life Scientist

Posted: at 5:27 am

By analysing genomic data from more than 30,000 people, an international research team has revealed thousands of new regulatory regions that control disease-linked genes. Their findings, published in the journal Nature Genetics, have been described as a significant step forward for genomics-driven precision medicine and could help identify markers that reveal which patients will benefit most from which treatment.

In this study we have provided an entirely new view of genetic regulation by uncovering an in-depth picture of how genes and disease are linked, said co-senior author Associate Professor Joseph Powell, Director of the Garvan-Weizmann Centre for Cellular Genomics and Deputy Director of the UNSW Cellular Genomics Futures Institute. It is the most comprehensive analysis of how human genetic variation affects gene expression to date.

To study how human genetic variation affects our risk of disease, researchers often carry out genome-wide association studies, which scan the genomes of patients and look for genetic variants more commonly associated with a specific condition. But interpreting these results is not straightforward instead of directly driving disease, many genetic variants instead regulate the activity of genes, influencing how much of a protein is produced.

By pinpointing these regulatory regions, known as expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs), researchers are able to better understand which genes directly contribute to disease risk and which could be targeted with precision treatments. In this study, the team used specialised machine learning algorithms to analyse genomic data from the blood samples of 31,684 individuals.

Thanks to the statistical power of this large dataset, we were able to uncover new regulatory regions on the human genome, Assoc Prof Powell said. Instead of just cataloguing the regulatory gene locations that were adjacent (known as cis-eQTLs), we were able to reveal genes that modulated the activity of more distant genes (known as trans-eQTLs).

Out of the millions of genes they investigated, the researchers found not only that 88% had a cis-eQTL effect, but that 32% of genes also had a trans-eQTL effect further away in the genome, more than half of which they could assign to a biological impact, such as cardiovascular and immune diseases.

While its clear that genetic variants are almost always a root cause of disease, the mechanism by which they influence disease is far less clear, Assoc Prof Powell said. For instance, while a specific condition may be linked to hundreds of genetic variants, the vast majority contribute to disease by regulating gene activity.

Understanding which genes this regulation converges on will be invaluable to identify targets for new potential medicines. If a pharmaceutical company develops a therapy that targets a certain molecule, our resource can help identify how its expression is regulated and if the genetic background of different patients is likely to impact its efficacy.

What weve discovered is an entirely new level of genomic information, providing a deeper understanding of biology and disease.

The teams resource is now available to researchers worldwide via http://www.eqtlgen.org.

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New regulatory regions uncovered on the human genome - Lab + Life Scientist

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