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