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The Application of CRISPR/Cas Systems for Antiviral Therapy

Helen J. E. Baddeley, Mark Isalan

2021Frontiers in Genome Editing37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As CRISPR/Cas systems have been refined over time, there has been an effort to apply them to real world problems, such as developing sequence-targeted antiviral therapies. Viruses pose a major threat to humans and new tools are urgently needed to combat these rapidly mutating pathogens. Importantly, a variety of CRISPR systems have the potential to directly cleave DNA and RNA viral genomes, in a targeted and easily-adaptable manner, thus preventing or treating infections. This perspective article highlights recent studies using different Cas effectors against various RNA viruses causing acute infections in humans; a latent virus (HIV-1); a chronic virus (hepatitis B); and viruses infecting livestock and animal species of industrial importance. The outlook and remaining challenges are discussed, particularly in the context of tacking newly emerging viruses, such as SARS-CoV-2.

Topics & Concepts

CRISPRBiologyContext (archaeology)VirologyComputational biologyVirusGenomeGeneticsGenePaleontologyCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringMosquito-borne diseases and controlViral Infections and Immunology Research
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