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CRISPR/Cas9 in the era of nanomedicine and synthetic biology

Tiziana Julia Nadjeschda Schmidt, Barbara Berarducci, Soultana Konstantinidou, Vittoria Raffa

2022Drug Discovery Today25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The CRISPR/Cas system was first discovered as a defense mechanism in bacteria and is now used as a tool for precise gene-editing applications. Rapidly evolving, it is increasingly applied in therapeutics. However, concerns about safety, specificity, and delivery still limit its potential. In this context, we introduce the concept of nanogenetics and speculate how the rational engineering of the CRISPR/Cas machinery could advance the biomedical field. In nanogenetics, the advantages of traditional approaches of synthetic biology could be expanded by nanotechnology approaches, enabling the design of a new generation of intrinsically safe and specific genome-editing platforms.

Topics & Concepts

CRISPRGenome editingSynthetic biologyNanomedicineComputational biologyCas9Context (archaeology)Genome engineeringNanotechnologyComputer scienceBiologyData scienceGeneGeneticsMaterials sciencePaleontologyNanoparticleCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesRNA Interference and Gene Delivery
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