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The NIH Somatic Cell Genome Editing program

Authors :
Ross C. Wilson
Kevin D. Wells
W. Mark Saltzman
Philip J. Santangelo
Guohua Yi
Aravind Asokan
Shengdar Q. Tsai
Nenad Bursac
R. Holland Cheng
Shaoqin Gong
Gang Bao
Jennifer A. Doudna
Venkata S. Sabbisetti
Jarryd M. Campbell
Ryuji Morizane
Charles A. Gersbach
Mary E. Dickinson
Jon D. Hennebold
Kit S. Lam
Zheng-Yi Chen
John T. Hinson
Melinda R. Dwinell
Daniel G. Anderson
William R. Lagor
Qiaobing Xu
Melissa C. Skala
Jennifer A. Lewis
David J. Segal
Samantha Maragh
Guoping Feng
Stephen C. Ekker
Benjamin E. Deverman
Jonathan K. Watts
Alice F. Tarantal
Moriel H. Vandsburger
George A. Truskey
Ionita Ghiran
Marina E. Emborg
Jeff W.M. Bulte
Scot A. Wolfe
James E. Dahlman
Niren Murthy
Paul B. McCray
Erik J. Sontheimer
John C. Tilton
David T. Curiel
Benjamin S. Freedman
Guangping Gao
Mary Shimoyama
Kam W. Leong
Jiangbing Zhou
P. J. Brooks
Samira Kiani
Krystof S. Bankiewicz
Karl J. Clark
Jillian F. Banfield
Jon E. Levine
Krishanu Saha
Todd C. McDevitt
David R. Liu
Randall S. Prather
Daniel F. Carlson
Peter M. Glazer
Elliot L. Chaikof
Jason D. Heaney
Subhojit Roy
John A. Ronald
Stephen A. Murray
Cathleen M. Lutz
Anastasia Khvorova
Wen Xue
Sushmita Roy
Oleg Mirochnitchenko
Danith H. Ly
David M. Gamm
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

The move from reading to writing the human genome offers new opportunities to improve human health. The United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) Somatic Cell Genome Editing (SCGE) Consortium aims to accelerate the development of safer and more-effective methods to edit the genomes of disease-relevant somatic cells in patients, even in tissues that are difficult to reach. Here we discuss the consortium’s plans to develop and benchmark approaches to induce and measure genome modifications, and to define downstream functional consequences of genome editing within human cells. Central to this effort is a rigorous and innovative approach that requires validation of the technology through third-party testing in small and large animals. New genome editors, delivery technologies and methods for tracking edited cells in vivo, as well as newly developed animal models and human biological systems, will be assembled—along with validated datasets—into an SCGE Toolkit, which will be disseminated widely to the biomedical research community. We visualize this toolkit—and the knowledge generated by its applications—as a means to accelerate the clinical development of new therapies for a wide range of conditions.<br />This Perspective discusses how the Somatic Cell Genome Editing Consortium aims to accelerate the implementation of safe and effective genome-editing therapies in the clinic.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
592
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7b9d20149cb2c9628c47c5de7bd8b66f