gizmodo | The gene-editing technology CRISPR could very well one day rid the
world of its most devastating diseases, allowing us to simply edit away
the genetic code responsible for an illness. One of the things standing
in the way of turning that fantasy into reality, though, is the problem
of off-target effects. Now Microsoft is hoping to use artificial
intelligence to fix this problem.
You
see, CRISPR is fawned over for its precision. More so than earlier
genetic technologies, it can accurately target and alter a tiny fragment
of genetic code. But it’s still not always as accurate as we’d like it
to be. Thoughts on how often this happens vary,
but at least some of the time, CRISPR makes changes to DNA it was
intended to leave alone. Depending on what those changes are, they could
inadvertently result in new health problems, such as cancer.
Scientists
have long been working on ways to fine-tune CRISPR so that less of
these unintended effects occur. Microsoft thinks that artificial
intelligence might be one way to do it. Working with computer scientists
and biologists from research institutions across the U.S., the company
has developed a new tool called Elevation that predicts off-target
effects when editing genes with the CRISPR.
It works like this:
If a scientist is planning to alter a specific gene, they enter its name
into Elevation. The CRISPR system is made up of two parts, a protein
that does the cutting and a synthetic guide RNA designed to match a DNA
sequence in the gene they want to edit. Different guides can have
different off-target effects depending on how they are used. Elevation
will suggest which guide is least likely to result in off-target effects
for a particular gene, using machine learning to figure it out. It also
provides general feedback on how likely off-target effects are for the
gene being targeted. The platform bases its learning both on Microsoft
research and publicly available data about how different genetic targets
and guides interact.
The work is detailed in a paper published Wednesday in the journal Nature Biomedical Engineering. The tool is publicly available for researchers to use for free. It works alongside a tool released by Microsoft in 2016 called Azimuth that predicts on-target effects.
There
is lots of debate over how problematic the off-target effects of CRISPR
really are, as well as over how to fix them. Microsoft’s new tool,
though, will certainly be a welcome addition to the toolbox. Over the
past year, Microsoft has doubled-down on efforts to use AI to attack health care problems.
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