Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 2 de 2
Filtrar
Más filtros

Banco de datos
Tipo de estudio
Tipo del documento
País de afiliación
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38328236

RESUMEN

Retrons are bacterial immune systems that use reverse transcribed DNA as a detector of phage infection. They are also increasingly deployed as a component of biotechnology. For genome editing, for instance, retrons are modified so that the reverse transcribed DNA (RT-DNA) encodes an editing donor. Retrons are commonly found in bacterial genomes; thousands of unique retrons have now been predicted bioinformatically. However, only a small number have been characterized experimentally. Here, we add substantially to the corpus of experimentally studied retrons. We synthesized >100 previously untested retrons to identify the natural sequence of RT-DNA they produce, quantify their RT-DNA production, and test the relative efficacy of editing using retron-derived donors to edit bacterial genomes, phage genomes, and human genomes. We add 62 new empirically determined, natural RT-DNAs, which are not predictable from the retron sequence alone. We report a large diversity in RT-DNA production and editing rates across retrons, finding that top performing editors outperform those used in previous studies, and are drawn from a subset of the retron phylogeny.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jul 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37503029

RESUMEN

Our understanding of genomics is limited by the scale of our genomic technologies. While libraries of genomic manipulations scaffolded on CRISPR gRNAs have been transformative, these existing approaches are typically multiplexed across genomes. Yet much of the complexity of real genomes is encoded within a genome across sites. Unfortunately, building cells with multiple, non-adjacent precise mutations remains a laborious cycle of editing, isolating an edited cell, and editing again. Here, we describe a technology for precisely modifying multiple sites on a single genome simultaneously. This technology - termed a multitron - is built from a heavily modified retron, in which multiple donor-encoding msds are produced from a single transcript. The multitron architecture is compatible with both recombineering in prokaryotic cells and CRISPR editing in eukaryotic cells. We demonstrate applications for this approach in molecular recording, genetic element minimization, and metabolic engineering.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA