Research and Application of CRISPR/Cas9 Technology in Oncology
and Blood Diseases
Hengyi Zhang
Guiyang No.1 Middle School, Guiyang, 550000, China
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9, Tumor, Thalassemia, Hemophilia.
Abstract: The CRISPR/Cas system has been widely studied and applied to various fields as an efficient and simple gene
editing tool. So far, CRISPR/Cas9 systems have evolved from the initial Cas9 to a variety of systems such as
12a and 13a; and also from the initial targeting of DNA and RNA to transcriptional regulation and DNA
recycling. In addition, with the recognition of target sequences, certain CRISPR/Cas systems, such as Cas12,
Cas13, and Cas14 proteins, exhibit non-specific cleavage activity on other single-stranded DNA or RNA
molecules indirectly after the recognition of target sequences to initiate targeted cleavage activity under the
guidance of guide RNA. This paper introduces the principle of CRISPR/Cas9 and discusses its application in
oncology and hematological diseases, laying the foundation for the application of CRISPR/Cas9 technology
in diseases, which also shows that CRISPR/Cas9 has a vast prospect of development.
1 INTRODUCTION
Some diseases are so specific that the virus is present
in a baby's body at birth, and treatment becomes a
major problem. Even if cured in the body, if it is
present in the genes or not completely eradicated, it is
bound to recur or get worse later, and even future
generations may be affected. Thanks to the efforts of
many scientists around the world, gene editing
systems were introduced in the 1980s, an emerging
genetic engineering technique or process capable of
modifying specific target genes in an organism's
genome, and are now widely used in the study of
diseases such as tumors and blood disorders. 2020,
French scientist Emmanuel Carpentier and American
scientist Jennifer Doudna researched the "CRISPR
gene editing technology" was even awarded the
Nobel Prize in Chemistry. However, gene editing
technology involves random homologous
recombination of cells, and the efficiency of
recombination is extremely low (one in a million),
thus limiting the widespread use of gene technology.
The CRISPR/Cas system based on RNA-guided
recognition of DNA has the advantages of
simultaneous editing of multiple sites, simple
operational design, and ease of operation. The main
feature is the recognition and specific degradation of
invaded exogenous DNA, and the variety of these
DNAs. The CRISPR/Cas9 system, a key element of
the type II CAS proteins, has enabled scientists to
efficiently and precisely modify DNA or insert
substitutions, allowing for the rapid and efficient
construction of microbial models. The tremendous
developments achieved by the CRISPR system
provide important opportunities for treating genetic
diseases and designing desirable genetic traits, as well
as new methods for imaging living cells, etc., laying
the foundation for the next applications of gene
editing technologies and new discoveries.
Tumor development is accompanied by a
combination of multiple genes in multiple ways and
processes that are continuous and slow (
Liu, 2015
).
Both different genes at the same stage of development
and the same gene at different stages of development
play different biological roles, so research on tumors
requires interference with different gene expression
in the same cell at different times or in different cells
at the same time. To achieve this goal, rapid and
effective gene editing technology is needed to
artificially control gene expression, and the newly
developed CRISPR gene editing technology can
better fill this gap and more rapidly advance the
research in many aspects.
The occurrence of blood disorders is mostly
associated with genetic mutations. Gene editing
technology, makes it possible to cure genetic
mutation diseases. It is mainly a recombination
204
Zhang, H.
Research and Application of CRISPR/Cas9 Technology in Oncology and Blood Diseases.
DOI: 10.5220/0012018400003633
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Biotechnology and Biomedicine (ICBB 2022), pages 204-208
ISBN: 978-989-758-637-8
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
pathway triggered by exogenous introduction of
chromosomes with internal homologous
recombination through nucleotides in the absence of
nucleases, coupled with the use of viral genes as
templates for editing. However, because of the low
correction probability of conventional gene editing
techniques, it is clinically limited, and the
CRISPR/Cas9 system can effectively remedy this
aspect. This paper will address the principles of
CRISPR/Cas9 and its applications in cancer and
hematological diseases, laying the foundation for the
application of CRISPR/Cas9 technology in diseases,
which is seen to have a vast future.
2 PRINCIPLE OF CRISPR/CAS9
SYSTEM
The CRISPR/Cas9 system mainly consists of Cas9
protein, crRNA and tracrRNA, while the first three
were uniformly replaced by sgRNA as research
progressed (sgRNA consists of base complementary
pairing region, Cas9 handle and terminator) (Li,
2017). The adaptive immune system of bacteria and
archaea for defense against foreign invading viruses
and phages is the CRISPR/Cas9 Cas9 origin (Li,
2018). As an adaptive immune system, the RNA of
CRISPR directs Cas proteins to recognize invading
exogenous genomes in the form of base
complementation and to shear exogenous DNA (Liu,
2015). The protein sequence structures can be
classified into three types based on the difference in
the sequence structure of Cas proteins and are noted
as: type I, type II, and type III. Because type II
contains only Cas9 protein and type I and III have
multiple protein sequences, this section focuses on
type II (Liu, 2015). Cas9 nucleic acid endonuclease
has a large structural domain, in which the RuvC
nucleic acid endonuclease-like domain at the N-
terminus and the HNH nuclease-like activity in the
middle play an important role in cutting DNA. When
the Cas9 protein cleaves the DNA double strand
resulting in a broken cut, HNH shears the
complementary strand while RuvC cuts the non-
complementary strand. And the binding of the
CRISPR/Cas9 complex to exogenous spacer
sequences is not affected when both endonuclease
sites are mutated (Liu, 2015).
The CRISPR/Cas9 system is simplified and
consists of two parts: Cas9 protein and sgRNA. The
principles are as follows: 1. The successfully
expressed sgRNA forms a complex through its own
Cas9 handle and Cas9 protein; 2. The sequence of the
base complementary pairing region of the complex
sgRNA pairs with the target sequence of the target
gene through the principle of base complementary
pairing; 3. Cas9 uses its own nucleic acid
endonuclease activity to cleave the target DNA
sequence, as shown in Figure 1:
Figure 1: Cas9 cleaved DNA sequence (Li, 2017).
Cas9 proteins have multiple functions and large
molecular weight, SpCas9 and SaCas9 are now the
main widely used Cas9 proteins that have been
applied to Streptococcus pyogenes and
Staphylococcus aureus (Pan, 2020). In the type II
system, crRNA becomes mature crRNA under the
action of RNaseIII, followed by complementation
with the homologous repeat sequence in tracerRNA
hybridized into a double-stranded RNA dimer
structure, which then binds to the Cas9 protein to
form a cleavage complex, the targeting of which can
be specialized for gene editing such as knockdown,
insertion and targeted mutation of exogenous genes
(Pan, 2020). The second part of CRIPS/Cas9 is a non-
protein-coding RNA, tracrRNA, which is used to
complete the maturation of crRNA and subsequent
DNA shearing. In the case of Streptococcus
pyogenes, for example, this RNA is transcribed from
two initiation sites to produce a 171 nucleotide and 89
nucleotide sequence precursor tracrRNA of length,
respectively, both of which are then further processed
into a 75 nucleotide sequence mature tracrRNA, the
precursor portion of which can complement the
crRNA precursor, thereby facilitating its maturation
(Li, 2018).
The cleavage of Cas9 produces DSBs (double-
strand breaks) in eukaryotic cells by two repair
pathways: non-homologous end joining and
qualitative homologous repair (Li, 2017). In many
bacteria without the NHEJ (nonhomologous ending
joining) pathway, DSBs can also be repaired using a
Research and Application of CRISPR/Cas9 Technology in Oncology and Blood Diseases
205
cellular homologous recombination system with a
chromosome or plasmid-borne template However,
the process often results in arbitrary nucleotide
insertions or deletions near the cleavage site. (Li,
2017) Thus, the NHEJ pathway typically alters the
reading frame of the target gene cleaved by Cas9,
prompting a shift in the target gene sequence and
triggering the premature appearance of a stop codon,
leading to the previously mentioned knockout (Li,
2017). The HDR pathway allows for precise Cas9
protein editing of the cleavage target, with specific
nucleotide sequence editing, insertion, deletion and
substitution of specific nucleotide sequences.
However, since an efficient NHEJ pathway does not
exist in many bacterial genomes, the DBS formed by
Cas9 cleavage leads to cell death (Li, 2017).
3 CRISPR/CAS9 GENE EDITING
TECHNOLOGY IN
ONCOLOGY
Malignant tumor muscle, which can also be cancer,
refers to a disease caused by abnormalities of cells
These proliferating cells also invade other healthy
parts of the body, resulting in a malfunction of the
mechanisms that control cell division and
proliferation.
Treatment of cancer is variable depending on
many factors, including the type, location and amount
of disease as well as the health status of the patient.
Most treatments kill/remove cancer cells directly or
cause their eventual death by depriving them of the
signals needed for survival. Traditional treatments
include: radiation therapy, surgery, and systemic
therapy (chemotherapy). While radiation therapy is
relatively safe (no anesthesia required) and can kill a
large number of even invisible tumor cells in a
specific area, it is prone to post-cure wound
complications and poor healing; surgery has the
ability to remove all cancer cells in a small area, but
cannot kill microscopic lesions at the edge of the
tumor; chemotherapy has the ability to kill cancer
cells throughout the body, but cannot kill the tumor
alone as well as systemic Toxicity makes this
treatment option not the best choice either.
With the rapid development of high-throughput
measurement technology and biological information
technology, researchers have obtained a large amount
of genetic information in tumor cells. In the process
of tumor development, different genes play different
roles at the same stage or the same gene at different
stages (Liu, 2015). Therefore, studies related to tumor
gene function need to effectively interfere with
different gene expression at different stages of cell
differentiation. Therefore, the study of tumor gene
function requires effective interference with the
expression of different genes at different stages of cell
differentiation. On this basis, the effect of the gene on
tumor development should be investigated so as to
artificially and effectively control the level of gene
expression within the cell. CRISPR/Cas9 is currently
being investigated for three applications: 1. targeted
editing of target genes using this gene editing
technology, which has been widely used in genetic
engineering of eukaryotes and prokaryotes; 2.
genome-scale editing based on this technology,
coupled with high-quality sequential technology
screening in combination with phenotypic gene-
related technologies; 3. Use of Cas9 (dCas9) after
inactivation of nuclease activity to transform it into a
device that uses RNA guidance to develop a wider
range of uses by fusing effectors with dCas9 (Liu,
2015).
In 2014, Torres et al. first initiated the study of the
CRIPR/Cas9 technique to construct a muscle model
of malignancy. cas9, guided by specific sgRNA,
cleaves outside the site-specific DNA, causing
inversions and ectopics in the chromosome where the
cleaved DNA is located, thus accurately mimicking
the formation of some tumors such as Ewing's
sarcoma (Qu, Li, Jiang, etc. 2015). In the same year,
Xue et al. used CRIPS/Cas9 technology to
successfully suppress double mutations in two
oncogenes (p53 and pten), and animal liver cancer
models were constructed. (Qu, Li, Jiang, etc. 2015)
Platt et al. published a mouse tumor model in which
a DNA plasmid expressing Cas9 nucleic acid
endonuclease and sgRNA was injected into the liver
of mice using a hydraulic tail vein injection
technique; the Pten and P53 oncogenes were also
edited in mice (Liu, 2015), and the targeting AVV
subtype vector was designated as a CRISPR/Cas9
delivery system, allowing Cas9 to be specifically
expressed in the liver and lung. The mouse model of
lung adenocarcinoma was successfully constructed
(Qu, Li, Jiang, etc. 2015). In addition, a study on the
relationship between rectal cancer and the PIK3R1
gene reports the application of functional studies of
solid tumor-related genes. The researchers used
CRISPR/Cas9 technology to knock down the PIK3R1
gene at the level of rectal cancer cell lines, and later
examined the changes in interepithelial
stromalization, proliferation, and stem cell properties
of tumor cells in the knocked-down cells and wild-
type cell lines, respectively, thereby demonstrating
that the PIK3R1 gene has the function of regulating
ICBB 2022 - International Conference on Biotechnology and Biomedicine
206
invasion, metastasis, and proliferation of rectal cancer
cells (Liu, 2015).
4 CRISPR/CAS9 GENE EDITING
TECHNOLOGY IN
HEMATOLOGICAL DISEASES
Most of the hematological diseases are associated
with genetic mutations and have limited and
ineffective therapeutic techniques, while the
application of gene editing technologies has made
another possibility for the treatment of hematological
diseases. Zinc finger ribonucleases and transcription
activator-like effector nucleases were found to be less
easy to design and less specific, as well as cytotoxic,
making these two techniques not widely available.
CRISPR/Cas9 is widely used in the field of disease
research because of its simplicity, targeting
specificity and affordability. In this section, we
present the progress of CRISPR/Cas9 technology in
two hematological diseases, thalassemia and
hemophilia (Li, 2018).
Thalassemia results in impaired hemoglobin
synthesis with symptoms similar to those of anemia
1. Fatigue and pallor due to low red blood cell
hematocrit, as well as skeletal disorders,
splenomegaly, and yellow fever. β - Thalassemia is
caused by mutations or small fragment deletions of
HBB (human bead protein) on chromosome 11,
which affects the transcription, shearing, and
translation of MRNA, resulting in β-hemoglobin
deficiency 1. This results in a deficiency of β-
hemoglobin.1 An abnormal excess of cells results in
an excess of α-protein chains and in damage to the
cell membranes of red blood cells, which may form
toxic aggregates if the damage is too great. The only
treatment currently available is hematopoietic stem
cell transplantation, but this is expensive and difficult
to match.1 In a 2012 clinical study in the United
States, researchers transfected β-thalassemia patients
with autologous CD34+ hematopoietic cells using a
wild-type β-globin transgenic TNS9.3.55 vector
(chronic viral vector), but no genetic markers were
detected in any of the four subjects.1 In recent years,
Liu et al. In recent years, Liu et al. used the
CRISPR/Cas9 system to screen for optimal gRNA as
well as a small molecule compound (L755507), in
combination with ssODN, to transfect iPSCs from β -
thalassemia patients, thereby repairing the deletion
mutation in β 41-42 (TCTT).1 Unlike the former,
Mettananda et al. used the α and β two-bead
imbalance protein chains resulting in ineffective
erythropoiesis and hemolysis in β -thalassemia
principle, greatly reduced the excess free α -bead
protein, thus greatly alleviating the clinical
manifestations of the patient.1 In addition, they used
the CRISPR/Cas9 system to delete mutations in the α
-bead protein MCS-R2 enhancer on the patient's
human hematopoietic stem cells to form α -
thalassemia.1 After editing, CD34+ cells
differentiated into mature erythrocytes, and the
reduction of α-hemoglobin corrected the
physiological imbalance between the two, thus
effectively improving the patient's symptoms (Li,
2018).
Hemophilia is an inherited bleeding disorder
associated with the X chromosome, which manifests
itself by patients bleeding longer and bruising easily
after surgery, along with an increased chance of
bruising and brain bleeding. Due to the difference in
genetic mutations, it can be divided into hemophilia
A and hemophilia B. Both have the same symptoms
with joint, muscle, and deep tissue bleeding.
Replacement therapy is currently the mainstay, but
the high cost of treatment and the production of
antibodies to clotting factors by frequent intravenous
infusions of clotting factor concentrates prevent
replacement therapy from being a long-term applied
and effective treatment.1 Hemophilia A is caused by
mutations in the F8 gene that encodes clotting factor
VIII. Researchers have induced pluripotent stem cells
(iPSC) from patients containing inversion mutations
in which the inversion gene was repaired to a normal
genotype using the CRISPR/Cas9 system and no off-
target mutations occurred throughout.1 Hemophilia B
is caused by mutations in the clotting factor IX (F9)
gene. The only current treatment is infusion of
clotting factor concentrate, which has a short half-life
and requires prolonged infusion. in 2011, researchers
at a children's research hospital and the University of
London, used a diphasic adeno-associated virus
(scAAV) carrying the optimized codon FIX gene for
treatment. After one year, stable expression of
activated IX factors was detected in all six subjects,
and the next 7-10 weeks, all showed specific T-
lymphocyte immune responses induced by the viral
capsid, accompanied by elevated transaminases.
Factors such as hepatotoxicity, reduction or loss of
introduced genes, and unmet demand for vector
production limited clinical application.1 Ohmori et al.
first abandoned conventional gene therapy by
injecting adenoviral vectors expressing Streptococcus
pyogenes Cas9 mRNA (Streptococcus pyogenes
Cas9) and sgRNA targeting exon 8 of the F9 gene in
mice8 (AVV8) was injected into the liver of wild
adult mice. A double-stranded DNA break occurred
Research and Application of CRISPR/Cas9 Technology in Oncology and Blood Diseases
207
at the target site of the F9 gene, and the introduction
of homologous recombination repair (HDR) at this
site sufficiently enhanced FIX activity. In addition,
insertion of F9cDNA in introns and repair with NHEJ
or HDR was effective in restoring coagulation
function (Li, 2018).
Currently, gene editing technology is not mature
enough to be fully applied in the clinical setting.
However, studies have shown that CRISPR/Cas9
gene editing technology will become an effective
solution for gene therapy for the treatment of
hematological diseases.
5 CONCLUSION
CRISPR/Cas9 systems are widely used in life
sciences, agriculture, medicine, and industry because
of their simple design and ease of operation.
Scientists have used gene editing to construct animal
disease models to study a variety of difficult clinical
conditions. In addition, in agriculture, CRISPR/Cas9
has also accelerated genetic breeding in plants and
animals, etc (Wang, 2017).
With the continuous improvement of
CRISPR/Cas9 technology system, its application will
be expanded in the fields of energy, environmental
protection, and health. The technology can also be
combined with other types of technologies, such as
gene sequencing, gene expression analysis, disease
modeling, and drug delivery, thus making the
application of various technologies more extensive.
In addition to the construction of animal models, it
has been shown that CRISPR can also be involved in
the regulation of bacterial metabolism. In addition,
CRISPR technology is also widely used in other
fields, for example, editing the mosquito genome to
obtain specific antibodies to control the transmission
of Plasmodium. The application of improving the
growth rate and temperature resistance of fish, the
research and application of pet size and coat color
formulation, etc. also enable CRISPR technology to
be widely used in daily life (Wang, 2107).
Despite the rapid development of CRISPR
technology, there are still some problems. Scientists
are refining this technology by modifying the editing
proteins, using direct homologous enzymes, using
material assistance, and other measures to make
CRISPR/Cas9 technology applicable to more fields.
REFERENCES
Chao Liu, CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing system in tumor
research, Chinese Journal of Lung Cancer, vol. 18, No.
9, September 2015, 571.
Cheng Qian, Zhu Jiye. "The application of CRISPR/Cas9
gene editing in cancer therapy." Advances in
Physiology 52.4 (2021):5.
Gong Chenyu et al. "Application of CRISPR/Cas9 gene
editing technology in tumor immunotherapy." Chinese
Journal of Immunology 34.1(2018):5.
Han Yunlei et al. "CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing and its
application in cancer research." Journal of Chengdu
Medical College 16.5(2021):5.
Li Xiao, CRISPR/Cas9 research Progress, Chinese Journal
of Bioengineering, 2017.37(10):86-92, 87.
Liao Fang, AND Wang Guangyin. "Advances in
CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing in cancer research and
therapy." Shenzhou 16(2020):1.
Liu Baobei et al. "Advances in CRISPR/Cas9 in cancer
therapy." Advances in Biotechnology 8.3(2018):6.
Meng Zesong et al. "CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing in cancer
research and therapy." Oncology 36.12(2016):7.
Qu Liang, Li Huashan, Jiang Yunhan, Qu Chunsheng, Qu
Qu, CRISPR/Cas9 system and its Application in gene
therapy of Human Disease, Chinese Journal of
Genetics, 2015 (10), 37 (10): 974-982.
Wanying Li, CRISPR/Cas9 system and its Research
progress in gene therapy of hematological Diseases,
Chinese Journal of Experimental Blood, 2018; 26 (6);
1863-1867 (1864).
Wang Liang, AND Zhao Tongbiao. "Principles of
CRISPR/Cas9 and advances in disease treatment."
Developmental Medicine Electronic Journal
5.1(2017):10.
Wang Shaorong et al. "CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing in cancer
research and therapy." Practical Cancer 34.7(2019):3.
Xin Pan, Progress in CRISPR/Cas9 System-mediated
Genome editing, Journal of Kaili University, Vol. 38,
No. 36, December 2020, 75.
Youhua Wang, Development and Prospect of CRISPR/Cas
System, Progress in Biotechnology, 2017, Vol.7, No.6,
594-600.
Yin YuPeng." Application of CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing
technology in tumor." Journal of Medical Post-doctoral
students 31.2(2018):5.
ICBB 2022 - International Conference on Biotechnology and Biomedicine
208