Modeling predicts that CRISPR-based activators, unlike CRISPR-based repressors, scale well with increasing gRNA competition and dCas9 bottlenecking: Difference between revisions
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{{Paper  | {{Paper  | ||
|Title=Modeling predicts that CRISPR-based activators, unlike CRISPR-based repressors, scale well with increasing gRNA competition and dCas9 bottlenecking  | |Title=Modeling predicts that CRISPR-based activators, unlike CRISPR-based repressors, scale well with increasing gRNA competition and dCas9 bottlenecking  | ||
|Authors=Samuel Clamons, Richard Murray  | |Authors=Samuel Clamons, Richard M. Murray  | ||
|Source=bioRxiv preprint  | |Source=bioRxiv preprint  | ||
|Abstract=Synthetic transcriptional networks built from CRISPR-based repressors (CRISPRi) rely on shared use of a core dCas9 protein. In E. coli, CRISPRi cannot support more than about a dozen simultaneous gRNAs before the fold repression of any individual gRNA drops below 10x. We show with a simple model based on previous characterization of competition in CRISPRi that activation by CRISPR-based activators (CRISPRa) is much less sensitive to dCas9 bottle-necking than CRISPRi. We predict that E. coli should be able to support dozens to hundreds of CRISPRa gRNAs at >10-fold activation.  | |Abstract=Synthetic transcriptional networks built from CRISPR-based repressors (CRISPRi) rely on shared use of a core dCas9 protein. In E. coli, CRISPRi cannot support more than about a dozen simultaneous gRNAs before the fold repression of any individual gRNA drops below 10x. We show with a simple model based on previous characterization of competition in CRISPRi that activation by CRISPR-based activators (CRISPRa) is much less sensitive to dCas9 bottle-necking than CRISPRi. We predict that E. coli should be able to support dozens to hundreds of CRISPRa gRNAs at >10-fold activation.  | ||
Latest revision as of 18:16, 9 October 2022
| Title | Modeling predicts that CRISPR-based activators, unlike CRISPR-based repressors, scale well with increasing gRNA competition and dCas9 bottlenecking | 
|---|---|
| Authors | Samuel Clamons and Richard M. Murray | 
| Source | bioRxiv preprint | 
| Abstract | Synthetic transcriptional networks built from CRISPR-based repressors (CRISPRi) rely on shared use of a core dCas9 protein. In E. coli, CRISPRi cannot support more than about a dozen simultaneous gRNAs before the fold repression of any individual gRNA drops below 10x. We show with a simple model based on previous characterization of competition in CRISPRi that activation by CRISPR-based activators (CRISPRa) is much less sensitive to dCas9 bottle-necking than CRISPRi. We predict that E. coli should be able to support dozens to hundreds of CRISPRa gRNAs at >10-fold activation. | 
| Type | Preprint | 
| URL | https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/719278v2 | 
| DOI | |
| Tag | CM19-biorxiv | 
| ID | 2019g | 
| Funding | |
| Flags | Biocircuits |