Breaking 11:20 Solana teaser on XRP fuels speculation over potential blockchain integration 11:00 Let cofounder Amir Hamza critically wounded in Lahore shooting 10:45 Chanel expands in California with the acquisition of a new vineyard estate 10:20 Gartner warns most ai driven mainframe migrations will fail 09:40 Bitcoin proposal seeks to freeze satoshi era coins over quantum risk 09:20 Researchers hijack ai agents via github prompt injection attacks 09:00 Mars bathtub ring discovery points to long lasting ancient ocean 08:40 Largest gravity test confirms Newton and Einstein across cosmic scales 08:20 Ai models can pass hidden traits through unrelated data study finds 07:50 Nikkei hits record high as US Iran talks lift markets 17:20 Apple expands ads in maps as unified business platform rolls out 17:00 Robinhood and Webull jump after US SEC approves removal of day-trading limits for small investors 16:30 Big advertising agencies settle US FTC probe over alleged boycott of political content 16:20 VW warns China car market may shrink for first time since 2018 16:00 Steve Aoki exits crypto holdings as Bored Ape NFTs lose 88% value 15:40 Anthropic shifts to usage pricing for enterprise AI customers 15:20 European farmers cut crops as Iran war disrupts fertilizer supply 15:00 Tesla completes AI5 chip design with mass production targeted for 2027 14:40 Renewables offset Hormuz crisis as fossil power output falls 14:20 Unitree launches $8,200 humanoid robot globally via AliExpress 14:00 Donald Trump threatens to reconsider trade deal with the United Kingdom 12:40 Gold holds near record as oil slips on US Iran talks hopes

Compact CRISPR enzyme advances in vivo gene editing potential

Tuesday 14 - 08:40
By: Dakir Madiha
Compact CRISPR enzyme advances in vivo gene editing potential

Researchers at University of Texas at Austin have engineered a compact CRISPR enzyme that fits inside viral delivery systems used in gene therapy, marking a step toward practical in vivo genome editing. The work, funded by the National Institutes of Health, was published in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology.

Current CRISPR systems used in clinical settings are often too large to be packaged into adeno-associated virus vectors, or AAVs, which are widely used to deliver gene therapies to target tissues. This size limitation has restricted most CRISPR applications to cells edited outside the human body.

The Texas team, working with Metagenomi Therapeutics, identified a naturally occurring enzyme known as Al3Cas12f that is small enough to fit into AAV vectors. Using imaging techniques and machine learning, they analyzed its structure and found it forms a more stable complex than similar enzymes.

Lead author David Taylor said the enzyme appears effectively preassembled and ready to function soon after its components are produced, which contributes to its stability and performance.

The researchers then engineered a modified version called Al3Cas12f RKK. This variant increased gene editing efficiency from below 10 percent to more than 80 percent across several genomic targets in human cells. In one frequently targeted region, efficiency reached 90 percent.

The team tested the system in human cell lines originally derived from a leukemia patient. They targeted genes linked to cancer, atherosclerosis, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The next phase will involve integrating the enzyme into AAV vectors and evaluating its performance under conditions closer to clinical use.

Erica Brown said targeted delivery of gene editing systems has broad clinical implications and that the findings move the field closer to real-world applications.

The study reflects a wider push to develop compact CRISPR systems compatible with in vivo delivery. If validated in clinical settings, such tools could expand treatment options for diseases that currently lack effective gene therapies.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.