Difference between revisions of "Team:Waterloo"

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                 <h2 class="orangetext no-border">Swappable sgRNA Targets</h2>
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                 <h2 class="orangetext no-border">sgRNA Exchange</h2>
 
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                 <h2 class="bluetext no-border">Engineered PAM Flexibility</h2>
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                 <h2 class="bluetext no-border">Cas9 PAM Flexibility</h2>
 
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                 <h2 class="greentext no-border">Antiviral Protection for Plants</h2>
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                 <h2 class="greentext no-border">CRISPR Plant Defense</h2>
 
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Revision as of 23:47, 15 September 2015

Waterloo iGEM CRISPieR Logo

sgRNA Exchange

Cas9 PAM Flexibility

CRISPR Plant Defense

Re-engineering CRISPR-Cas9 with functional applications in eukaryotic systems

CRISPR-Cas9 is an exciting tool for synthetic biologists because it can target and edit genomes with unprecedented specificity. Our team is attempting to re-engineer CRISPR to make it more flexible and easier to use.

We’re making it easy to test different sgRNA designs: restriction sites added to the sgRNA backbone allow 20 nucleotide target sequences to be swapped without excessive cloning.

Additionally, we’re applying recent research on viable mutations within Cas9’s PAM-interacting domain to design (d)Cas9 variants that bind to novel PAM sites, moving towards the goal of a suite of variants that can bind any desired sequence. We believe our re-engineered CRISPR-Cas9 will give biologists increased ability to optimize targeting in many applications.

The application we chose to explore is a proof-of-concept antiviral system defending the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana against Cauliflower Mosaic Virus, which would benefit from testing a large number of possible sgRNAs in the viral genome.

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