The world’s first monkeys with genes modified through a DNA engineering method known as Crispr/Cas9 were born in a lab. The scientific breakthrough by Chinese researchers could become a cornerstone for research and prevention of human genetic disorders.
Researchers at Nanjing Medical University and Yunnan Key Laboratory of Primate Biomedical Research in Kunming in China have created two genetically modified macaques with targeted mutations using the CRISPR/Cas9 system.
“Our study shows that the CRISPR/Cas9 system enables
simultaneous disruption of two target genes in one step without
producing off-target mutations,” study author Jiahao Sha
told the Science Daily. “Considering that many human diseases
are caused by genetic abnormalities, targeted genetic
modification in monkeys is invaluable for the generation of human
disease models.”
The researchers introduced single-cell macaque embryos with
modified Ribonucleic acids (RNAs) to generate the genome-editing
process. RNA is a ubiquitous family of large biological molecules
that perform multiple vital roles in the coding, decoding,
regulation, and expression of genes. Using the Crispr method,
Chinese scientists were targeting three genes in the experiment –
one that regulates metabolism, another that regulates immune cell
development and a third that regulates stem cells and sex
determination.
The birth of the genetically modified monkeys was not an easy
process. Scientists had to target the genes in 180 single-cell
monkey embryos. Eighty three of those 180 embryos were injected
into female macaques, yielded only 10 pregnancies.
Only one pregnancy so far led to the birth of a pair with
simultaneous mutations in two genes.
According to coauthor of the study Wezhi Ji, researchers
discovered multiple changes in their target genes at different
stages of embryonic development. But the newborn macaques are
still too young for researchers to determine if their experiment
had an effect on physiology or behavior, though “data from
this species should be very useful for curing human disease and
improving human health,” says Ji.
Monkeys are a natural choice to study human disorders because of
their close similarities to Homo Sapiens, although past
scientific endeavors of precision gene modification in primates
have failed.
Inserting, deleting, and modifying DNA in human cells and other
animal cells has been performed in labs within the confines of
petri dishes. The method of gene modifications was also applied
to various rodents and zebrafish, however with the birth of two
monkeys the study published in Cell magazine, shows that Crispr
can produce practical primates with genomes customized at
specific targeted genes.
Some researchers have already welcomed the breakthrough, saying
that this method can eventually help recreate in monkeys such
diseases as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, which can’t be studied
in other animals like mice.
"If we can identify genes for neurological disorders in a
clinical setting and transpose those into a monkey it would be of
massive benefit. I don't know that it'll lead to a rise in the
use of monkeys, but it will lead to more focused studies,"
said Tipu Aziz, who used primates for his work on Parkinson's
disease at Oxford University, the Guardian reports.
"People have been looking for primate models for a whole list
of diseases, but in the past it's been either completely
unfeasible, or incredibly expensive," Nelson Freimer,
director of the centre for neurobehavioral genetics at the
University of California, told The Guardian. “It's going to
be really critical to define the problems for which this is used,
just as you always do with animal research. You want to use all
the alternatives before you propose animal research. This will be
reserved for terrible diseases for which it offers hope that
cannot be gotten any other way.”