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Unravelling the promise and limitations of CRISPR/Cas system in natural product research: Approaches and challenges.

Protha BiswasUttpal AnandMimosa GhoraiDevendra Kumar PandeyNiraj Kumar JhaTapan BehlManoj KumarAbhijit DeyMahipal S ShekhawatAbhijit Dey
Published in: Biotechnology journal (2021)
An incredible array of natural products are produced by plants that serve several ecological functions, including protecting them from herbivores and microbes, attracting pollinators, and dispersing seeds. In addition to their obvious medical applications, natural products serve as flavouring agents, fragrances and many other uses by humans. With the increasing demand for natural products and the development of various gene engineering systems, researchers are trying to modify the plant genome to increase the biosynthetic pathway of the compound of interest or blocking the pathway of unwanted compound synthesis. The clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)/Cas9 has had widespread success in genome editing due to the system's high efficiency, ease of use, and accuracy which revolutionized the genome editing system in living organisms. This article highlights the method of the CRISPR/Cas system, its application in different organisms including microbes, algae, fungi and also higher plants in natural product research, its shortcomings and future prospects. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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