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=Structure of CRISPR/Cas9= | =Structure of CRISPR/Cas9= | ||
− | Ishino et al. reported in 1987 the presence of an intriguing stretch of DNA, close to a bacterial protein gene and composed of short direct-repeats interspaced by short unique sequences (protospacers) in <i>E. coli</i> genome, coming from bacteriophages of plasmids. The Cas protein is an endonuclease involved in a bacterial defense mechanism against bacteriophages by DSB. This is the work of Emmanuelle Charpentier’s teams between 2011 and 2012, by describing the molecular mechanism governing the accurate positioning of the DSB in DNA in the natural CRISPR/Cas9 system, which lead to the construction of artificial CRISPR/Cas9 engineered to produce DSB at any position chosen along the DNA sequence (Quétier, 2016). This DSB is induced in a specific way by an sgRNA, that is why the CRISPR/Cas9 system is considered as a RGEN (RNA-guided engineered nuclease). A representation is given on '''Fig. 2'''. | + | Ishino et al. reported in 1987 the presence of an intriguing stretch of DNA, close to a bacterial protein gene and composed of short direct-repeats interspaced by short unique sequences (protospacers) in <i>E. coli</i> genome, coming from bacteriophages of plasmids. The Cas protein is an endonuclease involved in a bacterial defense mechanism against bacteriophages by DSB. This is the work of Emmanuelle Charpentier’s teams between 2011 and 2012, by describing the molecular mechanism governing the accurate positioning of the DSB in DNA in the natural CRISPR/Cas9 system, which lead to the construction of artificial CRISPR/Cas9 engineered to produce DSB at any position chosen along the DNA sequence (Quétier, 2016). This DSB is induced in a specific way by an sgRNA, that is why the CRISPR/Cas9 system is considered as a RGEN (RNA-guided engineered nuclease). A representation is given on '''[Fig. 2]'''. |
[[File:Paris_Saclay--CRISPR2.png|500px|center|]] | [[File:Paris_Saclay--CRISPR2.png|500px|center|]] | ||
+ | <center>'''Figure 2''' : Structure of CRISP/Cas9 system</center> | ||
Bacteria insert protospacers into their own genome to form a CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats). In type II CRISPR systems, the transcription of a CRISPR unit leads to a RNA called crRNA, which binds by complementary in 3’ to an other RNA in 5’, called tracrRNA. Once these two RNAs are complexed, the new structure called sgRNA is blocked in the catalytic site of the Cas9 protein, to form an active DNA endonuclease, which is often termed dualRNA–Cas9. This complex can bind to DNA and recognize a 23bp target DNA sequence that is composed of the 20bp guide sequence in the crRNA (the protospacer) and the 5’-X20NGG-3’ sequence known as protospacer adjacent motif (PAM), which is recognized by Cas9 itself (Kim & Kim, 2014). | Bacteria insert protospacers into their own genome to form a CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats). In type II CRISPR systems, the transcription of a CRISPR unit leads to a RNA called crRNA, which binds by complementary in 3’ to an other RNA in 5’, called tracrRNA. Once these two RNAs are complexed, the new structure called sgRNA is blocked in the catalytic site of the Cas9 protein, to form an active DNA endonuclease, which is often termed dualRNA–Cas9. This complex can bind to DNA and recognize a 23bp target DNA sequence that is composed of the 20bp guide sequence in the crRNA (the protospacer) and the 5’-X20NGG-3’ sequence known as protospacer adjacent motif (PAM), which is recognized by Cas9 itself (Kim & Kim, 2014). |
Revision as of 20:57, 18 October 2016