PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

UMD reports six novel variants for CRISPR-Cas12a in plants, expanding genome engineering

New publication in Nature Communications offers patentable tools to improve the efficiency of food production

UMD reports six novel variants for CRISPR-Cas12a in plants, expanding genome engineering
2021-03-29
(Press-News.org) In a new publication in Nature Communications, associate professor of Plant Science at the University of Maryland Yiping Qi continues to innovate genome editing and engineering in plants, with the ultimate goal of improving the efficiency of food production. His recent work contributes six novel variants of CRISPR-Cas12a that have never before been proven in plants, testing them first in rice as a major global crop. In addition to allowing for a much broader scope of possible gene editing targets, these new tools can edit many different sites in the genome at once, or even repress gene expression to tone down undesirable traits. These patent-pending tools greatly expand the scope of what CRISPR-Cas12a can do in plants, which can help to produce food more effectively to feed a growing global population.

"We are excited about this paper because we've contributed two major breakthroughs," says Qi. "First, we've reported multiple Cas12a tools with genome editing capabilities in plants for the first time, and found one [Mb2Cas12a] that hugely broadens the targeting range of Cas12a. Second, we've developed a very efficient system that can edit many different sites at once [multiplexed editing], and that allows us to edit 16 different genes in rice in a single generation."

As Qi explains, Cas12a (like other CRISPR systems) has typically been tied to targeting a specific short sequence of DNA known as a PAM sequence. The PAM sequence is what CRISPR systems typically use to identify where to possibly make their molecular cuts in DNA. However, the new Mb2Cas12a variant introduced by Qi works under relaxed PAM requirements, broadening the scope of what can be targeted for editing the way Qi's lab recently did for CRISPR-Cas9.

In addition to this discovery, the multiplexed editing system introduced for Cas12a in plants provides specific strategies for efficiently editing multiple sites across the genome all at once. For this proof-of-concept, Qi's team first targeted six different sites in the genome to enhance rice yield and disease resistance. But when this was successful, the team didn't stop there.

"I wanted to add more targets to see if there is any limit," explains Qi. "So we added 10 more and tried to target 16 sites, and we found that across almost all rice chromosomes, we had an amazingly high efficiency with all sites being edited all at once in one generation. And that doesn't even represent the upper limit necessarily, but it is the most genes in a plant that has ever been recorded as being edited all at once in one generation for Cas12a."

This system has major implications for precision breeding and the efficiency of food production, says Qi. "For precision breeding, how many genes you can edit at once is really practically important because you can target almost anything and really tailor the product. We targeted disease resistance and yield, but you can add more traits like nitrogen use efficiency, climate resilience traits such as temperature tolerance, and more. It is really a robust system."

Qi is currently doing work to examine the off-targeting effects of editing more genes at once with more relaxed target site requirements. But in addition to these contributions, this paper also demonstrated Cas12a's utility as a synthetic repressor of genes in the model plant Arabidopsis as another tool for genome engineering.

"You can regulate activation or repression of certain genes by using CRISPR not as a cutting tool, but instead as a binding tool to attract activators or repressors to induce or suppress gene expression to engineer desirable traits. In this case, Cas12a is acting as glue, not as scissors. You use an inactivated form of Cas12a to inactivate the expression of other genes. It's a great new tool for the industry and for future research."

Future work will expand these tools out of rice and Arabidopsis, and into all kinds of plants and crops. "This type of technology helps increase crop yield and sustainably feed a growing population in a changing world," says Qi. "I am very pleased to continue to expand the impacts of CRISPR technologies."

INFORMATION:

This paper, entitled "Expanding the scope of plant genome engineering with Cas12a orthologs and highly multiplexable editing systems," can be found in Nature Communications, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-22330-w.

This work is funded by the Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research New Innovator Award (Award #593603), the National Science Foundation's Plant Genome Research Program (Award #1758745), the Biotechnology Risk Assessment Grant Program from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (Award #2018-33522-28789), and Syngenta.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
UMD reports six novel variants for CRISPR-Cas12a in plants, expanding genome engineering

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Stroke rate 4 times higher in Black adults than whites

2021-03-29
-- Black middle-aged adults had an incidence rate of stroke 4 times higher than that of white middle-aged adults, according to a Kaiser Permanente study published March 29 in Hypertension. The large national prospective study highlights the need to raise awareness among young and middle-aged Black adults about the impact of high blood pressure, called hypertension, on stroke, the research team said. "What we found striking in this study was that the incidence of stroke began to increase rapidly starting at around age 40 for Black adults," said the study's co-author Jamal S. Rana, MD, PhD, an adjunct investigator with the Division of Research at Kaiser Permanente in Northern California, and ...

Laser lights the way

Laser lights the way
2021-03-29
Despite the enormous amount of research over the decades into lasers and their applications, there have been few ways to accurately, efficiently, and directly observe fine details of their interactions with materials. For the first time, researchers have found a way to acquire such data from a production laser using low-cost equipment that could vastly improve the accuracy of items cut or etched with lasers. Given the ubiquity of lasers, this could have wide-ranging implications in laboratory, commercial and industrial applications. Lasers are used in an extraordinarily wide range of applications in the modern world. ...

'Animal-stress' signal improves plant drought resilience

2021-03-29
A team of Australian and German researchers has discovered a novel pathway that plants can use to save water and improve their drought tolerance. The research published today in Nature Communications shows that the molecule GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid), most commonly associated with relaxation in animals, can control the size of the pores on plant leaves to minimise water loss. Matthew Gilliham, Director of the Waite Research Institute at the University of Adelaide, who led the research team, said they found: "GABA minimised pore openings in a range of crops such as barley, broad bean and soybean, and in lab plants that produce more GABA than normal. ...

Cells rely on their crampons to avoid slipping

Cells rely on their crampons to avoid slipping
2021-03-29
Each human being is made of billions of cells. In order to ensure his survival, cells must coordinate with each other and attach in the right place to perform their tasks. Scientists from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), Switzerland, in collaboration with the University of Tampere in Finland, have highlighted the key role of a protein called paxillin, which enables cells to perceive their environment and anchor at the right place with the help of cellular "crampons". Indeed, without functional paxillin, the cell is unable to attach properly and slips continuously. These results, to be read in the journal Communications Biology, shed new light ...

Noninfluenza viruses have rates of illness, death similar to flu

2021-03-29
Noninfluenza respiratory viral infections (NIRV) are associated with illness and death rates similar to influenza in hospitalized adults, according to new research in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). In a study of 2119 adults admitted to two hospitals over three seasons (2015-2018) in Edmonton, Alberta, and Toronto, Ontario, with confirmed viral acute respiratory infections, more than half (54.6%) were NIRV infections compared with influenza viruses (45.4%). Among patients with NIRV infections, 21.1% needed respiratory support, 18.2% required lengthy hospital stays and 8.4% died within 30 days of diagnosis. About 15% of NIRV infections were acquired in hospital. "These findings show that clinical ...

Forests on caffeine: coffee waste can boost forest recovery

Forests on caffeine: coffee waste can boost forest recovery
2021-03-29
A new study finds that coffee pulp, a waste product of coffee production, can be used to speed up tropical forest recovery on post agricultural land. The findings are published in the British Ecological Society journal Ecological Solutions and Evidence. In the study, researchers from ETH-Zurich and the University of Hawai`i spread 30 dump truck loads of coffee pulp on a 35 × 40m area of degraded land in Costa Rica and marked out a similar sized area without coffee pulp as a control. "The results were dramatic" said Dr Rebecca Cole, lead author ...

One in five Colorado high school students has access to firearms

One in five Colorado high school students has access to firearms
2021-03-29
Twenty percent of high school students have easy access to a handgun, according to a new study from the Colorado School of Public Health on the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. In the study published today in The Journal of Pediatrics, the researchers examined the prevalence of handgun access among adolescents in Colorado and explored individual and geographic characteristics, as well as related health factors. "Our findings highlight that it is relatively easy to access a handgun in Colorado for high school students. This finding, combined with ...

How AI beats spreadsheets in modelling future volumes for city waste management

How AI beats spreadsheets in modelling future volumes for city waste management
2021-03-29
Growing cities tend to run out of land for waste management and new landfill sites. Artificial Intelligence can help city managers create more powerful long-term forecasts of solid waste volumes and landfill requirements, even with missing or inaccurate data. UJ researchers found that a 10-neuron model produced the best 30-year forecast for municipal solid waste in a growing city. All over the world, large cities are running out of space for municipal solid waste. Existing landfill sites are rapidly filling up and no-one wants a new site anywhere near their homes or businesses. Meanwhile, taxpayers aren't interested in higher costs for quality waste management either. One way of significantly extending ...

More exercise, fewer screens: New Australian guidelines for kids in OSHC

2021-03-29
Groundbreaking research from the University of South Australia has delivered world-first national-level guidelines to better inform children's physical activity and screen time in Outside School Hours Care (OSHC). Developed with input from the OSHC sector, the guidelines aim to address growing concerns of children's sedentary behaviour marked by an increase in regular screen time. Research shows that 31-79 per cent of OSHC sessions are sedentary. The guidelines specifically encourage energetic play while discouraging screen use: Before School Care should schedule 45 minutes of physical activities and no more ...

Carried with the wind: mass migration of Larch Budmoth to the Russian High Arctic

2021-03-29
Arctic habitats have fascinated biologists for centuries. Their species-poor insect faunas, however, provide little reward for entomologists - scientists who study insects - to justify spending several weeks or even months in the hostile environments of tundra or polar deserts. As a result, data on insects from the High Arctic islands are often based on occasional collecting and remain scarce. Vize Island, located in the northern part of the Kara Sea, is one of the least studied islands of the Russian High Arctic in terms of its biota. Scientists Dr Maria V. Gavrilo of the Arctic ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study: How can low-dose ketamine, a ‘lifesaving’ drug for major depression, alleviate symptoms within hours? UB research reveals how

New nasal vaccine shows promise in curbing whooping cough spread

Smarter blood tests from MSU researchers deliver faster diagnoses, improved outcomes

Q&A: A new medical AI model can help spot systemic disease by looking at a range of image types

For low-risk pregnancies, planned home births just as safe as birth center births, study shows

Leaner large language models could enable efficient local use on phones and laptops

‘Map of Life’ team wins $2 million prize for innovative rainforest tracking

Rise in pancreatic cancer cases among young adults may be overdiagnosis

New study: Short-lived soda tax reinforces alternative presumptions on tax impacts on consumer behaviors

Fewer than 1 in 5 know the 988 suicide lifeline

Semaglutide eligibility across all current indications for US adults

Can podcasts create healthier habits?

Zerlasiran—A small-interfering RNA targeting lipoprotein(a)

Anti-obesity drugs, lifestyle interventions show cardiovascular benefits beyond weight loss

Oral muvalaplin for lowering of lipoprotein(a)

Revealing the hidden costs of what we eat

New therapies at Kennedy Krieger offer effective treatment for managing Tourette syndrome

American soil losing more nutrients for crops due to heavier rainstorms, study shows

With new imaging approach, ADA Forsyth scientists closely analyze microbial adhesive interactions

Global antibiotic consumption has increased by more than 21 percent since 2016

New study shows how social bonds help tool-using monkeys learn new skills

Modeling and analysis reveals technological, environmental challenges to increasing water recovery from desalination

Navy’s Airborne Scientific Development Squadron welcomes new commander

TāStation®'s analytical power used to resolve a central question about sweet taste perception

NASA awards SwRI $60 million contract to develop next-generation coronagraphs

Reducing antimicrobial resistance: accelerated efforts are needed to meet the EU targets

Gaming for the good!

Early adoption of sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor in patients hospitalized with heart failure with mildly reduced or preserved ejection fraction

New study finds atrial fibrillation common in newly diagnosed heart failure patients, and makes prognosis significantly worse

Chitnis receives funding for study of wearable ultrasound systems

[Press-News.org] UMD reports six novel variants for CRISPR-Cas12a in plants, expanding genome engineering
New publication in Nature Communications offers patentable tools to improve the efficiency of food production