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Born in Lithuania, British chemist Aaron Klug (1926-2018) won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1982 for developments in electron microscopy and his work on complexes of nucleic acids and proteins. His long and influential career led to a knighthood in 1988. [Listeners: Ken Holmes, John Finch; date recorded: 2005]
TRANSCRIPT: They took this SCID gene. Now the SCID gene it's known what it is. And it's a single monogenic disease but it occurs in different places and different patients. It isn't like sickle cell anaemia where there's... every single patient has the same mutation, in the very same place, but the mutations tend to be clustered, they tend to be clustered in one of the X arms which is 100 base pairs along but you can make zinc fingers for any particular target. As I said they are cheap to make. So in order to do research on it, there's a system of cells called K562 cells in which the SCID mutation has been transplanted into human kidney cells. So this is a model system but it's got the SCID mutation in. And this K562 cells are basically leukemic cells. If you introduce them into mice, you can put the human cells into mice and then mice get leukaemia. So this is the object of the experiments at Sangamo.
So the K562 cells were... Sangamo made... Michael Holmes made a zinc finger nuclease using four zinc fingers, two twos, remember I said things were made in twos? Four zinc fingers attached... to a catalytic domain to target... if this is the mutant site... four zinc fingers to bind to one side carrying the catalytic domain which then would be in position over the mutant, over the mutants of the desired site. Another group of four zinc fingers with another catalytic domain and the two catalytic domains interact, they make homodimers, they homodimerize. Each makes a single strand you cut them together you make a double stranded cut. So they made double stranded cuts and then they introduced an extra chromosomal DNA donor, a DNA donor which carried the right sequence and this was a piece of DNA which is several hundred bases long, with the correct sequence, put into a plasma which is a thousand bases. And they did this, of course this was all experimental medicine really. They did this with different amounts of donor DNA, extra chromosomal donor DNA rather than then donor... so the donor is now the piece of DNA rather than the chromosome because the sister chromosome also has, of course, the same, it's a homozygous disease, also has this... also has this defect. And the... and now so you have something which is a pretty unique target, you've got four zinc fingers, four zinc fingers, that's twelve base pairs on either side and they are a certain fixed distance apart. And the chances of that occurring anywhere else in the genome is negligible. One of the chaps there calculated it, it's ten to the minus 22, or something which means it's negligible. So they created this and they said... they did rough and ready experiments with different amounts of dosage, different amounts of nuclease and so on. And they found that as they improved the efficiency, they were getting anything from 15% to in the end 21% correction. So 21% of all the cells are corrected. In some cases, the 21% or the 20% is 16% on one chromosome and 4% on the other. So this is correcting, basically they can correct... you only have to correct one chromosome really, but that would be enough, so that showed. And they also did study to make sure there would be no disruptions anywhere else in the genome. The referees were pretty hard in all this, you had to demonstrate that...
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