Simon Sretenovic in lab.
The technologies that enable these changes are called genome editing technologies. Throughout history, several genome editing technologies have been developed. For example, mutagenesis exposes plant seeds to chemicals or radiation to randomly change the instructions stored in DNA. Several grain crops, like wheat and maize varieties producing higher yields were created in the 1950s using this technique. Transgenic technologies introduce genes from other organisms into plant genomes to facilitate new plant traits. Bt corn is a plant created in 1996 using this technique for defense against insect pests.
Mutagenic and transgenic technologies can be thought of as toolkits used by plant breeders. For example, a sculptor would have large hammers at his disposal to drastically reshape a sculpture. The latest amongst genome editing technologies, CRISPR-Cas toolkit, is in many ways more like a watchmaker’s toolkit compared to sculptor’s toolkit. Rather than a hammer, the watchmaker may have a small screwdriver to loosen and pick up a stuck screw without changing any other tiny components of the wristwatch. Using the CRISPR toolkit, plant genomes are altered in a targetable way with minimal damage to any non-targeted part of the genome.
Though an improvement on prior toolkits, CRISPR technology still has drawbacks. For example, not all information within a plant genome can be edited and certain CRISPR tools have proven unreliable. As a result, several researchers have tried to engineer a CRIPSPR toolkit to improve performance. This is where my contribution comes in as a graduate researcher in Dr. Yiping Qi’s lab at the University of Maryland-College Park. We tested several engineered CRISPR-Cas toolkits, prepared by other researchers for genome editing of mammalian cells, in plants. We found that one toolkit element (called SpRY-Cas9) demonstrated drastically expanded targeting scope to almost every target site tested. In other words, it could edit even hard to reach information buried within plant genome. By repurposing enzymes, which are able to modify plant genomes, from various organisms we hope to produce novel CRISPR tools that provide a valuable addition to the existing CRISPR toolbox.