Team:CU-Boulder/Learning
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Latest revision as of 22:49, 15 August 2014
iGem CU-Boulder
Overview
-
DAY NOTES
- Our Project
Our Project
In the last decade the number of antibiotic resistant bacteria has grown at
a shocking rate, making these “superbugs” one of our top global health threats.
This trend indicates that the golden age of antibiotics is ending and makes the
search for new antibacterial treatments more important than ever. New bacterial
treatments need the ability to adapt faster than the harmful bacteria that they
target. Additionally, new treatments must preserve essential bacteria of the
microbiome and specifically target pathogenic bacteria in a mixed population.
New technology has recently emerged that allows us to achieve these goals.
CRISPR-Cas9 consists of an endonuclease (Cas9) that is guided to a specific
sequence within a genome by a CRISPR RNA component. Once targeted to the
genome, Cas9 causes a double stranded break, killing the host bacterial cell.
Because the killing relies on the sequence of the CRISPR guide RNA, which can
be engineered to contain a short specific nucleotide sequence, unique genes
within any pathogenic bacteria can be targeted. Utilizing a non-replicating
phage as a vector, we can efectively deliver the CRISPR-Cas9 machinery to cells
and kill bacteria through CRISPR-Cas9–targeting of the genome. Ongoing
experiments are aimed at demonstrating that sequence-specific killing can
occur in a mixed population of cells as well as in an in vivo model. We believe
that this technology, which we refer to as “Pathogen Assassin” will have broad
applications ranging from medicine to industry and beyond.