跟读练习: CRISPR-Cas9 Genome Editing Technology - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

C2
跟读控制
0% 已完成 (0/25 )
We’ve examined a handful of biotechnology concepts  in previous tutorials, but now it’s time to introduce what is undoubtedly the most promising  technique in biotechnology of the past decade. The CRISPR-Cas9 system represents genome editing  technology that has revolutionized molecular biology, due to its precise and site-specific gene  editing capabilities, which essentially allow for an unprecedented level of control in manipulating  the genetic information of a living organism.
⏸ 已暂停
所有句子
25
1
We’ve examined a handful of biotechnology concepts  in previous tutorials, but now it’s time to introduce what is undoubtedly the most promising  technique in biotechnology of the past decade. The CRISPR-Cas9 system represents genome editing  technology that has revolutionized molecular biology, due to its precise and site-specific gene  editing capabilities, which essentially allow for an unprecedented level of control in manipulating  the genetic information of a living organism.
2
How does this work mechanistically, and what are  its applications? Let’s get a closer look now, starting with some historical context. In 1987, Atsuo Nakata and his team of researchers from the Osaka University in  Japan first reported the presence of Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats,  abbreviated as CRISPR, in the Escherichia coli genome. These refer to short, repeated sequences  of DNA nucleotides found within the genome of prokaryotes. These sequences are the same  when read from 5' to 3' on one strand of DNA and from 5' to 3' on the complementary strand, and  are therefore described as palindromic repeats, just the way that we refer to words like racecar  or kayak as being palindromes, because they are the same whether read forwards or backwards. This  was further reported in both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, along with archaea,  leading to the obvious question regarding the relevance of CRISPR to these organisms,  which drove research for some time. Later on, in the mid 2000s, the functionality and importance  of CRISPR was first realized in prokaryotes. As it turns out, the CRISPR system is a key component  of their adaptive immunity, which protects these prokaryotes from attack by viral DNA,  bacteriophages, and plasmids. That’s right, it may seem incredible, but even unicellular bacteria  have a very basic immune system. Recall from our studies in the immunology series that adaptive  immunity refers to the immunity that an organism acquires after exposure to an antigen, either  from a pathogen or vaccination. Vaccination, for example, results in a form of adaptive  immunity in humans, since the body is exposed to antigens, and forms antibodies in response, which  contribute to the development of the immunity.
3
The way this works for bacteria is as follows. The  unique sequences that are nestled in between the palindromic repeats, which are called spacers, are  bits of DNA that are foreign, and do not belong to the bacterium, but instead originate from mobile  genetic elements, or MGEs, such as bacteriophages, transposons, or plasmids that have  previously infected the prokaryote.
4
This was revealed by sequencing the spacers found  in the CRISPR system, which led to the hypothesis that this could be a defense mechanism employed  by bacteria to recognize foreign DNA elements.
5
During a viral infection, bacteria acquire  a small piece of the foreign viral DNA, and integrate it into the CRISPR locus to  generate CRISPR arrays. These consist of duplicate sequences, which are the palindromic  repeats belonging to the bacterial genome, flanked by variable sequences, or spacers, which  again are from the foreign genetic elements.
6
In this way, bacteria retain a memory,  so to speak, of a past infection.
7
So although it was initially revealed as a  genomic component of bacteria and archaea, CRISPR has inspired a method of genome editing  that can be applied to various eukaryotic species. But before we get there, we first have to  understand the function of CRISPR in prokaryotes, because understanding the mechanism of its natural  function will be necessary in order to understand the way it is exploited to achieve genome editing  capabilities in humans and other organisms.
8
Let’s take a look at a particular Streptococcus  bacterium which is being attacked by a bacteriophage. Once the viral DNA is injected into  the cell, a section of it can be incorporated into the bacterial genome, and as we mentioned, it  will be inserted between the repeated palindromic sequences. This will now be called a spacer.  So here we can see three different spacers, potentially from three different viruses,  sandwiched in between the repeated palindromic sequences. Now we have what is called a  CRISPR array. This CRISPR array can undergo transcription, to form CRISPR RNA, abbreviated  as crRNA, although this longer strand is called pre-crRNA. Then the protein Cas9 gets involved.  Cas refers to CRISPR-associated nuclease protein, and as we know, nucleases are enzymes  that are capable of cleaving DNA at specific nucleotide linkages, kind of  like a pair of scissors. In particular, Cas9 is one of the nucleases found in Streptococcus  pyogenes, which is one of the most extensively researched and characterized CRISPR-associated  nuclease proteins, so this is the one we will be looking at here inside this bacterium. Now along with Cas9, there are also molecules of tracrRNA. These have sections  that are complementary to and therefore can anneal to the palindromic repeats. So for  each spacer and palindromic repeat, we end up with a complex consisting of that segment of  pre-crRNA, a tracrRNA, and a Cas9 protein.
9
Then another enzyme called ribonuclease three,  or RNase III, will cleave the strand in between these complexes, leaving us with individual crRNA  complexes which we can call effector complexes.
10
With these effector complexes formed, the cell  is now ready to defend against the invader whose genome produced that crRNA. If this  complex encounters a section of viral DNA that has a sequence which is complementary to this  crRNA, the nuclease enzyme will coordinate, and if it recognizes a short sequence unique to the  viral genome called a protospacer adjacent motif, or PAM, then it will snip both strands of the  DNA, just a few base pairs upstream from the PAM.
11
In doing so, it will neutralize the  virus, because its genome can no longer be transcribed properly to create more  viral particles, so infection is impossible.
12
So that gives us a reasonable understanding of  how CRISPR is employed by prokaryotic organisms as a natural defense. Now it’s time to understand  how this phenomenon came to serve as the basis for biotechnological application. This begins in  2012, when Jennifer Doudna, a molecular biologist from the University of California, Berkeley  along with French microbiologist Emmanuelle Charpentier, were the first to propose  that the bacterial CRISPR-Cas9 system could be used as a programmable toolkit for  genome editing in humans and other animal species, and they eventually received the Nobel  prize in chemistry for their work, in 2020.
13
So how can genome editing be achieved using this  method? The first thing we need to understand is that in bacteria, the crRNA and tracrRNA are  separate molecular entities. The first major breakthrough arrived when it was realized that  the roles of these molecules could be combined into a single molecule by fusing them together  with a linker to generate something called single guide RNA, or sgRNA, which  can be synthesized in the lab.
14
If the sgRNA complexes with a Cas9 protein, this  two-component system will be able to cleave DNA just as the three-component system does in  bacteria. What this means was that it was then possible to determine any sequence of about 20  base pairs as a target for editing, and all that has to be done is to synthesize the appropriate  sgRNA with the complementary sequence, and insert that into a cell along with the Cas9 protein which  has been sourced from Streptococcus pyogenes.
15
The complex will form, read the DNA until it  finds the appropriate sequence along with a PAM sequence, binding will occur, and DNA will  be cleaved at precisely the desired location.
16
Cas9 has two domains, and each one  will snip one of the DNA strands.
17
After the incision is made, the natural DNA  repair mechanism is enacted for the target DNA.
18
The cleaved dsDNA can undergo repair via two  routes. Either by homology-directed repair, abbreviated as HDR, or by non-homologous end  joining, abbreviated as NHEJ. The NHEJ pathway repairs double-strand breaks in DNA by directly  ligating without the need for a homologous template, which means a DNA strand with similar  sequence that can act as a template. The NHEJ mechanism can also introduce insertion or deletion  of specific sequences at the joining ends, thus creating what are referred to as indels.  Indels are DNA strands with either an insertion or deletion of nucleotide sequences. Thus, NHEJ  produces DNA strands with non-uniformity in size.
19
The other route of repair, the HDR pathway, is  commonly found in bacterial and archaeal cells, while the NHEJ pathway we just discussed is more  common in a eukaryotic domain. The HDR process, although more complex than NHEJ, uses a homologous  DNA template. The homologous DNA template has homology to the adjacent sequences surrounding the  site of cleavage to incorporate new DNA fragments.
20
The template guides the repair process, and  lowers the possibility of errors. Since there is no insertion or deletion of nucleotide sequences,  the HDR pathway maintains uniformity in the size of the resulting dsDNA, unlike NHEJ. So that covers the mechanism of CRISPR genome editing technology. Now we move on  to the potential applications, which have only expanded ever since Doudna and Charpentier  suggested the possibility of using CRISPR for genome editing in humans and other animals. The  potential scope of application of CRISPR is vast, and includes its use as a genetic screen  to identify genes in different cells.
21
One of the most prominent applications is in  cancer immunotherapy. In this practice, immune T cells, which are a type of white blood cell that  fights against a disease, are genetically modified using CRISPR technology. Specifically, these  T cells are extracted from the patient’s body and modified to make them more specialized in  recognizing cancer cells and killing them once they are reintroduced into the patient’s body. Similarly, CRISPR has also found its application in therapeutic management of acquired  immunodeficiency syndrome, or AIDS, which is caused by human immunodeficiency virus, also known  as HIV, as we covered in the microbiology series.
22
Conventional anti-retroviral therapies are  capable of suppressing viral replication. But once the virus gets converted to its proviral  form, conventional therapies are ineffective in targeting the virus. The provirus resides  within the immune cells and continues to make copies of itself using the immune cell machinery,  and the immune cells fail to target the proviral latent reservoir which presents the risk  of viral rebound or relapse of the disease.
23
Other than cancer and AIDS, CRISPR has also found  immense application in developing assays to detect SARS-CoV-2 infection, the cause  of the current global pandemic.
24
Although genome editing of human embryos  and their implantation into a human womb, as well as genetic editing of somatic cells, have  wide ethical concerns and potential risks, CRISPR has the promise to cure various diseases and  prevent the inheritance of gene-linked diseases.
25
Additionally, genome editing in  plants using CRISPR technology introduces the possibility of making  plants resistant to certain diseases, improving their phenotype or observable  characteristics, incorporating certain specific traits, improving crop yield, and so  forth. With so many invigorating possibilities for this exciting new technology, it will be  fascinating to see which of these major diseases and issues will be solved first, signaling  the dawn of a new era in molecular biology.
App Store 和 Google Play 评分 4.9/5

Shadowing English 移动端

随时随地使用 Shadowing English 应用学习英语。今天就提高您的沟通技巧!

跟踪您的学习进度
AI 评分和纠错
丰富的视频库
Shadowing English Mobile App

背景与概述

在过去的教程中,我们探讨了一些生物技术的概念,但现在是时候介绍过去十年中无疑是最具前景的生物技术技术——CRISPR-Cas9基因组编辑技术。这项技术通过精准、特定位置的基因编辑能力,彻底改变了分子生物学,使科研人员能够前所未有地控制生物体的遗传信息。这段视频详细介绍了CRISPR的历史背景及其工作机制,为想要提高英语口语能力的学习者提供了一个绝佳的实践机会。通过模仿这些专业知识,学习者可以提高他们的英语口语练习技巧。

日常交流的五个常用短语

  • CRISPR系统:指的是一种基因组编辑技术,改变了生物技术的面貌。
  • 基因组编辑:通过精确地修改DNA序列,以改变生物体的遗传特征。
  • 适应性免疫:一种获取免疫力的机制,帮助细菌抵御病毒攻击。
  • 单导向RNA:用来指导Cas9蛋白寻找和切割目标DNA序列。
  • 修复机制:细胞在DNA断裂后自行修复的过程,包括同源重组与非同源末端连接。

逐步影子跟读指导

想要提高您的英语口语能力,尤其是在科学和技术领域,以下是有效的逐步影子跟读指南:

  1. 选择合适的材料:从视频中选择与CRISPR相关的段落,例如关于基因组编辑或免疫机制的描述。
  2. 理解内容:在跟读之前,确保您理解每个术语的含义,并记录下不懂的单词。
  3. 第一遍听:专注于听发音和语调,记住生物学领域的特定术语,如“CRISPR”或“Cas9”。
  4. 模仿发音:使用影子语音练习(shadowspeak)技术,边听边重复,努力模仿说话者的语调和速度。
  5. 录音反馈:录下自己的声音与原视频进行比较,分析发音及语调的差异,并反复练习。

通过这种英语影子跟读(英语影子跟读)的方式,您可以更有效地备考雅思口语,增强日常交流能力,实现流利的英语口语表达!

什么是跟读法?

跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。

请我们喝杯咖啡