Promise of cheap and fast CRISPR-based diagnostics

Handheld CRISPR device to enable faster diagnosis of genetic disease

Promise of cheap and fast CRISPR-based diagnostics

A team of researchers in the US has developed a handheld device that diagnoses genetic diseases at point-of-care. Called CRISPR-Chip, the device combines a deactivated clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) Cas9 protein with electronic transistors to identify genetic mutations in DNA samples without the need for amplification or replication of the DNA segment using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR).

Avoiding the time-consuming PCR step is expected to enable the use of CRISPR-Chip for genetic testing in a doctor’s office or field work setting, rather than sending samples to a laboratory.

The method can also be used to assess the accuracy of gene-editing techniques.

The researchers included scientists from the University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley) and the Keck Graduate Institute (KGI) of The Claremont Colleges.

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New CRISPR Diagnostics Firm

Broad, Wyss Institute Researchers Launch CRISPR Dx Firm Sherlock Biosciences

NEW YORK (GenomeWeb) – Engineering biology startup Sherlock Biosciences announced today that it has launched with initial financing of $35 million and licenses to foundational CRISPR and synthetic biology technology from the Broad Institute and Harvard's Office of Technology Development…

Sherlock will use engineering biology tools, including CRISPR and synthetic biology, to develop a new generation of molecular diagnostics that can rapidly deliver accurate results for a vast range of needs in virtually any setting and at low cost, the company said.

The financing includes a $17.5 million non-dilutive grant and an investment from the Open Philanthropy Project, as well as funds from additional undisclosed investors.

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