New genome-editing technology to help treat blood cancers

Posted: March 12, 2015 at 7:44 pm

IMAGE:Australian researchers have developed a new genome editing technology that can target and kill blood cancer cells with high accuracy. Dr Brandon Aubrey, Dr Gemma Kelly and Dr Marco Herold (L-R)... view more

Credit: Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research.

Melbourne researchers have developed a new genome editing technology that can target and kill blood cancer cells with high accuracy.

Using the technology, researchers from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute were able to kill human lymphoma cells by locating and deleting an essential gene for cancer cell survival.

The research, published in the journal Cell Reports, provides a 'proof of concept' for using the technology as a direct treatment for human diseases arising from genetic 'errors'.

Dr Brandon Aubrey, Dr Gemma Kelly and Dr Marco Herold adapted the technology, called CRISPR, to specifically mimic and study blood cancers. The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute has one of the most advanced CRISPR laboratories in Australia, established and led by Dr Herold.

Dr Aubrey, who is also a haematologist at The Royal Melbourne Hospital, said the team used the CRISPR technology to target and directly manipulate genes in blood cancer cells.

"Using preclinical models, we were able to kill human Burkitt lymphoma cells by deleting MCL-1, a gene that has been shown to keep cancer cells alive," he said. "Our study showed that the CRISPR technology can directly kill cancer cells by targeting factors that are essential for their survival and growth. As a clinician, it is very exciting to see the prospect of new technology that could in the future provide new treatment options for cancer patients."

The CRISPR/Cas9 system works by efficiently locating and targeting particular genes of interest in the whole genome. It can either target the gene to introduce mutations that make the gene non-functional, or introduce changes that make mutated genes function normally again.

Dr Herold said pharmaceutical companies around the world were already investing millions of dollars to develop CRISPR as a tool for treating genetic diseases such as cancer.

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New genome-editing technology to help treat blood cancers

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