CRISPR-based self-cleaving mechanism for controllable gene delivery in human cells

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Abstract

Controllable gene delivery via vector-based systems remains a formidable challenge in mammalian synthetic biology and a desirable asset in gene therapy applications. Here, we introduce a methodology to control the copies and residence time of a gene product delivered in host human cells but also selectively disrupt fragments of the delivery vehicle. A crucial element of the proposed system is the CRISPR protein Cas9. Upon delivery, Cas9 guided by a custom RNA sequence cleaves the delivery vector at strategically placed targets thereby inactivating a co-expressed gene of interest. Importantly, using experiments in human embryonic kidney cells, we show that specific parameters of the system can be adjusted to fine-tune the delivery properties. We envision future applications in complex synthetic biology architectures, gene therapy and trace-free delivery.

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Moore, R., Spinhirne, A., Lai, M. J., Preisser, S., Li, Y., Kang, T., & Bleris, L. (2015). CRISPR-based self-cleaving mechanism for controllable gene delivery in human cells. Nucleic Acids Research, 43(2), 1297–1303. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gku1326

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