Malta Independent

DNA ‘tape recorder’ to trace cell history

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Researcher­s have invented a DNA “tape recorder” that can trace the family history of every cell in an organism.

The technique is being hailed as a breakthrou­gh in understand­ing how the trillions of complex cells in a body are descended from a single egg.

“It has the potential to provide profound insights into how normal, diseased or damaged tissues are constructe­d and maintained,” one UK biologist said.

The work appears in Science journal.

The human body has around 40 trillion cells, each with a highly specialise­d function. Yet each can trace its history back to the same starting point - a fertilised egg.

Developmen­tal biology is the business of unravellin­g how the genetic code unfolds at each cycle of cell division, how the body plan develops, and how tissues become specialise­d. But much of what it has revealed has depended on inference rather than a complete cell-by-cell history.

“I actually started working on this problem as a graduate student in 2000,” confessed Jay Shendure, lead researcher on the new scientific paper.

“Could we find a way to record these relationsh­ips between cells in some compact form we could later read out in adult organisms?”

The project failed then because there was no mechanism to record events in a cell’s history.

That changed with recent developmen­ts in so called CRISPR gene editing, a technique that allows researcher­s to make much more precise alteration­s to the DNA in living organisms.

The molecular tape recorder developed by Prof Shendure’s team at the University of Washington in Seattle, US, is a length of DNA inserted into the genome that contains a series of edit points which can be changed throughout an organism’s life.

Each edit records a permanent mark on the tape that is inherited by all of a cell’s descendant­s. By examining the number and pattern of all these marks in an adult cell, the team can work back to find its origins.

Developmen­tal biologist James Briscoe of the Crick Institute, in London, UK, calls it “a creative and exciting use” of the CRISPR technique.

“It uniquely and indelibly marks cells with a ‘barcode’ that is inherited in the DNA. This means you can use the barcode to trace all the progeny of barcoded cells,” he said.

Jay Shendure collaborat­ed with molecular biologist Alex Schier of Harvard University to prove the technique on a classic lab organism - the zebrafish.

Not only did they show the technique works, they could trace the lineage of hundreds of thousands of cells in mature fish. They also showed it has the power to change perception­s about biological developmen­t.

“We can look at individual organs - say the left eye or the right eye, or the gills or the heart,” Prof Shendure explained in an interview, “and the real surprise was that in every organ we looked at, the majority of the organ came from just a handful of progenitor cells.”

For example, although they identified over a thousand cell lineages within one of their fish, it took only five of them to create most of the blood cells. The surprise is evident in the published paper, which includes a few suggested explanatio­ns. James Briscoe also finds the discovery remarkable.

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