If you like transposons...
If you you love genome editing...
Or if you just like random bird animations,
we have the paper for you!
We (@kedmonds.bsky.social et al) are happy to share our work turning a songbird retrotransposon into a genome editing tool. π£ (1/n)
03.07.2025 03:20
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STITCHR, a tool that can make virtually any kind of edit in mammalian genomes including the scarless multi-kilobase scale insertions. Plasmids here www.addgene.org/browse/artic...
10.04.2025 20:06
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We're looking into it :) the differences in UTR dependencies between in vitro and in cells is interesting. Big fan of your work!
10.04.2025 13:13
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Lastly, Iβm very thankful of my excellent co-first authors Lukas Villiger, Justin Lim, Masa Hiraizumi, and mentors Omar and Jonathan. We are so grateful for our fantastic ongoing collaborations with Hiroshi Nishimasu. Thanks to all co-authors for their invaluable contributions!
09.04.2025 17:15
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This was a really fun project which Iβm excited is finally out. There were some unique challenges on the way, including learning how to Southern blot to address a reviewerβs concern. The blot got buried in the supplemental, but it took me months, so here it is in all its glory
09.04.2025 17:14
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Thereβs much more data in the paper, so please check it out! We also showed insertion by delivering RNA templates, insertion in different cell types, in vitro characterization of STITCHR, mapping of nicking sites, PacBio sequencing of long insertions, offtarget mapping and more
09.04.2025 17:14
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STITCHR can insert whatever is between its homology arms. We can efficiently install a diverse range of edits, including substitutions, deletions and large insertions of at least 12.7kb with high fidelity
09.04.2025 17:14
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We tested a panel of R2s for their ability to perform scarless insertion at AAVS1, identifying R2Tocc as our best orthologue due to high on-target insertion and low 28S insertion. After screening sgRNA panels and homology arms, we could insert efficiently at multiple genomic loci
09.04.2025 17:14
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We found the architecture of the RNA cargo to be critical. The 3β UTR is dispensable in cells, however, the homology arms and a small section of the 5β UTR are essential, including a short sequence homologous to its natural 28S insertion site.
09.04.2025 17:13
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Swapping out homology arms for NOLC1 sequences led to the natural reprogramming of R2Tg, inserting a GFP at NOLC1, which was improved with nCas9-assited retargeting. We called this system Site-specific Target-primed Insertion via Targeted CRISPR Homing of Retroelements (STITCHR).
09.04.2025 17:13
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To understand cargo constraints, we permuted R2Tgβs RNA template, deleting and/or re-ordering the UTR and homology arm architecture. Interestingly, deletion of the UTRs internal to the homology arms were still functional and resulted in scarless cargo insertion!
09.04.2025 17:13
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We selected a diverse set of R2s and tested if they could insert non-natural cargoes at their natural sites in human cells. We identified an R2 from the zebra finch Taeniopygia guttata (R2Tg) with high insertion activity in cells and in vitro.
09.04.2025 17:13
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We were interested in whether R2s could be reprogrammed in cells. We searched the natural world, uncovering 8,248 orthologues and their site preferences. Excitingly, we discovered instances of R2s acquiring novel insertion sites during evolution, a natural form of reprogramming!
09.04.2025 17:12
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In the AbuGoot lab, we were intrigued by the R2 retrotransposon class of mobile genetic elements. Foundational work by Thomas Eikbush and colleagues showed a Target-Primed Reverse Transcription mechanism of insertion, priming with RNA homology arms.
09.04.2025 17:11
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