A landmark study published in Cell has shown that prime editing, a cutting-edge form of gene editing, can correct mutations causing Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood (AHC) with a single in-brain injection. The research team fixed the most prevalent ATP1A3 gene mutations in mouse models, reducing symptoms and more than doubling survival, a first-of-its-kind success in treating a neurological disease directly in the brain. CRISPR-based gene editing was delivered through an harmless adeno-associated virus called AAV9. In parallel, patient-derived cells (iPSCs) responded similarly, reinforcing the method’s promise for human translation. Importantly, this success opens the door to targeting other genetic brain disorders previously deemed untreatable. Although results are preliminary, this study provides robust proof‑of‑concept for personalized gene editing in the brain and opens doors toward potential treatments for other intractable genetic neurological disorders.
RNA repair could be a fundamental aspect of biology, and harnessing this activity could lead to new life-saving cures. In particular, RNA editing has important applications in the search for treatments for genetic diseases. A team of researchers recently published research showing how RNA can be edited using a different CRISPR system to that for DNA, called type III. The study article entitled "Repair of CRISPR-guided RNA breaks enables site-specific RNA excision in human cells" was published in the journal Science and is the latest advance in the team's ongoing exploration of CRISPR applications for programmable genetic engineering.