The genome editing tool CRISPR, short for “clustered regularly interspaced short
palindromic repeats,” has taken molecular biology laboratories by storm over
the past 5 years. It has been used to edit the genomes of crops and
livestock to improve breeding and production, to control populations of
disease-carrying insects, to silence genetic disorders in animal models, and
more. Here are a few highlights from the short but shining history of CRISPR.
The Meteoric
Rise of CRISPR
Assessment available in
CRISPR
PubMed search results for “CRISPR” by year
2,143
Search results article count 1,258
607
282
126
79
6 12 21 32 45
1 1 0 5
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
The term “CRISPR” is
coined by researchers
in Spain and the
Netherlands.
The final necessary piece
for the genome editing system
is identified: a second
small RNA needed to guide
Cas9 to its targets.
In China, scientists use
CRISPR-Cas9 to edit
preimplantation human embryos,
repairing a mutated gene that
would cause a blood disorder.
Subsequently, an international
ban prohibits the use of genome
editing to make changes to the
human genome.
CRISPR repeats are
first observed in
bacterial genomes.
Their significance
is not yet known.
Researchers propose
that CRISPR functions
in nature as part of a
bacterial adaptive
immune system.
The CRISPR-Cas9
system is used to edit
targeted genes in both
human and mouse cells,
and later plant cells.
The first human trial to
use CRISPR genome editing
gets approval from the
National Institutes of
Health, in a cancer
therapy trial to edit a
patient’s own immune
system cells.
2002 2011 2015
1987 2006 2013 2016