Evolving a new CRISPR system to insert genes

evoCAST (credit: George Lampe)

Recently, David Liu won the Breakthrough Prize for inventing two tools for precise, small-scale genome editing (base editing and prime editing). However, in some cases, rather than correcting a mutation within a defective gene, it may be more practical to insert a fully functional copy of the gene. That’s the mission of evoCAST, the latest invention from the Broad Institute near Boston, a hub for next-generation CRISPR tools.

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An RNA bridge for genome design

When small tweaks aren’t enough and massive DNA interventions are needed, a new biotech tool inspired by a peculiar class of jumping sequences may come to the rescue.
Barbara McClintock discovered mobile genes in the 1940s, and since then these transposable elements have never ceased to amaze.

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