Publication | Open Access
Small-Molecule Control of Super-Mendelian Inheritance in Gene Drives
49
Citations
29
References
2020
Year
EngineeringGeneticsGenomic MechanismMolecular GeneticsModified Spcas9Gene DrivesOff-target EffectGene DriveGenome SurgeryGene SegregationGenome EditingBiologyGene-drive SystemComputational BiologyGenetic EngineeringSynthetic BiologyGenetic MechanismGene EditingSystems BiologyMedicineCrispr
Synthetic CRISPR-based gene-drive systems have tremendous potential in public health and agriculture, such as for fighting vector-borne diseases or suppressing crop pest populations. These elements can rapidly spread in a population by breaching the inheritance limit of 50% dictated by Mendel's law of gene segregation, making them a promising tool for population engineering. However, current technologies lack control over their propagation capacity, and there are important concerns about potential unchecked spreading. Here, we describe a gene-drive system in Drosophila that generates an analog inheritance output that can be tightly and conditionally controlled to between 50% and 100%. This technology uses a modified SpCas9 that responds to a synthetic, orally available small molecule, fine-tuning the inheritance probability. This system opens a new avenue to feasibility studies for spatial and temporal control of gene drives using small molecules.
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