Large DNA fragment knock-in and sequential gene editing in Plasmodium falciparum: a preliminary study using suicide-rescue-based CRISPR/Cas9 system

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Abstract

CRISPR/Cas9 technology applied to Plasmodium falciparum offers the potential to greatly improve gene editing, but such expectations including large DNA fragment knock-ins and sequential gene editing have remained unfulfilled. Here, we achieved a major advance in addressing this challenge, especially for creating large DNA fragment knock-ins and sequential editing, by modifying our suicide-rescue-based system that has already been demonstrated to be highly efficient for conventional gene editing. This improved approach was confirmed to mediate efficient knock-ins of DNA fragments up to 6.3 kb, to produce “marker-free” genetically engineered parasites and to show potential for sequential gene editing. This represents an important advancement in establishing platforms for large-scale genome editing, which might gain a better understanding of gene function for the most lethal cause of malaria and contribute to adjusting synthetic biology strategies to live parasite malaria vaccine development. Site-directed knock-in of large DNA fragments is highly efficient using suicide-rescue-based CRISPR/Cas9 system, and sequential gene insertion is feasible but further confirmation is still needed.

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APA

Lu, J., Tong, Y., Dong, R., Yang, Y., Hu, W., Zhang, M., … Chen, X. (2024). Large DNA fragment knock-in and sequential gene editing in Plasmodium falciparum: a preliminary study using suicide-rescue-based CRISPR/Cas9 system. Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry, 479(1), 99–107. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11010-023-04711-5

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