Close

Drag-and-drop genome insertion without DNA cleavage with CRISPR-directed integrases

Eleonora I. Ioannidi, Matthew T. N. Yarnall, Cian Schmitt-Ulms, Rohan N. Krajeski, Justin Lim, Lukas Villiger, Wenyuan Zhou, Kaiyi Jiang, Nathaniel Roberts, Liyang Zhang, Christopher A. Vakulskas, John A. Walker II, Anastasia P. Kadina, Adrianna E. Zepeda, Kevin Holden, Jonathan S. Gootenberg, Omar O. Abudayyeh

Posted on: 15 December 2021

Preprint posted on 1 November 2021

A new CRISPR command, Ctrl + PASTE: a method to insert large DNA sequences without double-stranded DNA breaks

Selected by Louise Moyle, Soni Mohapatra, Fabio Liberante, Nozomu Takata

Background/Introduction

 Gene editing via CRISPR-Cas9 has wide-ranging potential for biological and medical sciences, but current technologies show limited efficacy at inserting large DNA sequences, especially in sensitive cell types and cell states.

The integration of a sequence-of-interest into a cell’s genomic DNA through standard CRISPR-Cas9 editing requires the Cas9 endonuclease to induce a double-stranded break (DSB) and the activation of the cell’s homology directed repair (HDR) pathway in response to the damage, to facilitate sequence integration. However, in most cells and stages of the cell cycle, non-HDR pathways (e.g. non-homologous end-joining (NHEJ)) predominate, and in non-dividing cells, HDR is largely inactive, making efficient integration almost impossible. Further, all DSB-repair based methods are error-prone, causing insertions or deletions (indels), DNA translocations and activation of apoptosis pathways, which are all undesirable outcomes.

A major advance came in 2019 with the development of Prime Editing (1) which combines a modified Cas9 nickase fused to a reverse transcriptase (RT) enzyme and a prime editing guide RNA (pegRNA), which both directs Cas9 to the target site and contains the DNA sequence-of-interest to be inserted. The Cas9 nickase induces a site-specific single-stranded DNA break at the target. The 3’ end of the pegRNA then binds to the open DNA ‘flap’ via a primer binding sequence, and the RT (an RNA-dependent DNA polymerase) creates a complement of the pegRNA sequence (including the desired edit). This newly-created strand contains micro-homology to the existing old DNA sequence and displaces it. This system allows efficient gene editing without the need for a potentially toxic DSB. Whilst game changing (2), Prime Editing is limited to relatively small DNA changes (80bp max) encoded within the pegRNA. Consequently, it can introduce small fragments or repair disease-associated mutations, but cannot insert full-length genes.

This preprint by Ionannidi, Yarnall, Schmitt-Ulms and colleagues aims to simplify and accelerate the insertion of large DNA fragments, especially in non-dividing cells. They develop PASTE (Programmable Addition via Site-specific Targeting Elements): a modified CRISPR-Cas9 system, which builds on Prime Editing and adds recombinases (specifically, serine integrases, which catalyze the excision and integration of foreign DNA (3)) to enable the insertion of large DNA cargo.

A) Schematic of the novel PASTE system.  PASTE uses an engineered Cas9 nickase fused to an RT and serine integrase Bxb1. The RT inserts AttB/AttP integration sites which are then recognized by Bxb1, followed by insertion of cargo DNA. B) Comparison of PASTE, HITI (homology-independent targeted insertion) and HDR. PASTE does not rely on DNA repair pathways for gene integration. C) Representative fluorescence images depicting multiplexed orthogonal insertion of GFP and mCherry reporters at ACTB and LMNB1 loci, respectively. (Figure adapted with the author’s permission from Ionannidi, Yarnall, Schmitt-Ulms et al.)

 

Key Findings

 Development of the PASTE system

The authors set out to combine the functionality of Prime Editing with the sequence-specific integration capabilities of integrases, a subset of recombinases. They fused the serine integrase Bxb1 to an existing Cas9 nickase and RT enzyme fusion (aka Prime Editor). As in Prime Editing, the Cas9 nickase induces a single-stranded break and the RT enzyme replaces the original DNA sequence with the pegRNA-encoded sequence. However, with the PASTE system, the pegRNA instead inserts an AttB serine integrase recognition site (here referred to as atgRNA). This DNA sequence acts as a beacon to Bxb1, which recombines any corresponding AttP DNA fragment in a unidirectional manner into that site (Fig. 1A + B). With PASTE, a circular DNA sequence containing a single AttP is co-transduced into cells, driving insertion of that entire fragment.

Expansion of the PASTE system

While Cre is the most widely used recombinase, its DNA integration capabilities are limited because recombination is bidirectional, meaning it can recur. In contrast, serine integrases like Bxb1 (used in this study) are unidirectional, and once recombined, the recognition sequences are no longer accessible to the enzyme. An added advantage is that specific AttB/AttP sequence pairs can be used for independent and parallel (orthogonal) recombination. The authors highlight this by showing that Bxb1 supports at least 4 different AttB/AttP variants, to allow simultaneous genetic integration events in the same cell (Fig. 1C).

Identification of new serine integrases functional for PASTE

Despite the advantages of serine recombinases, few have been characterised for DNA integration in human cells. Here, the authors mined existing metagenomic data for novel recombinases. They identified and tested a number of candidates including BceINTc, which originated from a stool sample. This recombinase had improved efficiency (2-3X better) compared to Bxb1 when tested in their PASTE system. However, the existence of pseudo-sites in the genomes of model organisms or other off-target integrations was not covered in their analysis.

Functional in non-dividing or primary cells

To prove that PASTE is versatile, the authors tested its functionality in several physiologically relevant cell types, including primary human T cells and quiescent hepatocytes. While the efficiency was much lower than cell lines (~5% vs. ~30%), it is a big improvement for challenging cell types and promising from a cell/gene therapy standpoint.

 Tools to help simplify design of PASTE constructs for use

The authors have established a pipeline to assist in selecting or designing atgRNA based on their considerable profiling of PASTE events. However, the tool is not yet available as a graphical interface, potentially reducing accessibility for some labs.

 

Why is this paper interesting?

 The authors made several technological innovations in this study that show wide potential for the PASTE system. They showed the first ever example of efficient targeted integration of large DNA cargoes of up to ~ 36 kb, which covers most known coding sequences in human and mouse genomes, as well as integration of three different genes at different loci in tandem. By overcoming the need for active DSB DNA repair pathways in cells, they were able to insert genes into various difficult-to-edit cell types, increasing future gene editing applications.

Another interesting aspect of this manuscript is the discovery of novel serine integrases that were active in HEK293FT cells. By optimising AttB sequences, they were able to enhance BceINTc’s recombinase activity compared to that of Bxb1-based PASTE. Although the authors focused on recombinase efficiency within the PASTE system rather than stand-alone, the discovery of these novel integrases may be useful for other molecular biology applications.

This preprint was not the only significant Prime Editing-based tool released on BioRxiv this November. David Liu’s laboratory (inventors of the original technology) have now developed twinPE, which uses 2 pegRNA sequences to improve the efficiency and increase the size of insertions/deletions/inversion/replacement compared to standard prime editing. The team also combine twinPE with the serine integrase Bxb1 (in this case as a separate protein) to insert 5kb sequences and use the combined technology to mediate a 40kb inversion of the gene causing Hunter syndrome (4).

 

References

  1.  Anzalone, A.V., Randolph, P.B., Davis, J.R. et al. Search-and-replace genome editing without double-strand breaks or donor DNA. Nature 576, 149–157 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1711-4
  2. Scholefield, J., Harrison, P.T. Prime editing – an update on the field. Gene Ther 28, 396–401 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41434-021-00263-9
  3. Rutherford, K and Van Duyne, GD. The ins and outs of serine integrase site-specific recombination. Curr Opin Struct Biol. 125–131 (2014). doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2014.01.003
  4. Anzalone, A.V, Gao, X.D, Podracky, C.J, et al. Programmable large DNA deletion, replacement, integration, and inversion with twin prime editing and site-specific recombinases. BioRxiv (2021) https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.11.01.466790

 

Questions to authors

  1.  Is the newly discovered BceINT integrase unidirectional like Bxb1? And are there pseudo recognition sites in the human/mouse genomes?
  2. The preprint highlights the side-effects of using DSB based gene editing. PASTE generates single-strand nicks, but did the authors assess the damage/stress response associated with these?
  3. Have the authors tested PASTE or plan to test it in post-mitotic cell types such as terminally differentiated cells, or 3D cultures?
  4. Once the integrase has inserted the transgene or sequence of interest, the inserted sequence still remains flanked with the AttL/AttR sequences. Do the authors propose any consequences of these genomic scars for therapeutic gene integration, such as effects on gene regulation, transcription, splicing etc.?
  5. Would the authors expect expression of a ‘PASTE-ed’ sequence if it is inserted into a heterochromatic region?

Tags: crispr, gene editing

doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/prelights.31163

Read preprint (No Ratings Yet)

Author's response

Omar Abudayyeh & Jonathan Gootenberg shared

1.Is the newly discovered BceINT integrase unidirectional like Bxb1? And are there pseudo recognition sites in the human/mouse genomes?

BceINT is unidirectional as far as our data suggests, consistent with the activity of phage/pro-phage derived serine integrases. We have not characterized off-target sites in the human/mouse genome but we are definitely following up on this.

 

2. The preprint highlights the side-effects of using DSB based gene editing. PASTE generates single-strand nicks, but did the authors assess the damage/stress response associated with these?

We did analyze RNA-seq during PASTE experiments and found few perturbations to the transcriptome in terms of differentially regulated gene expression. We did not look specifically for DNA damage response.

 

3. Have the authors tested PASTE or plan to test it in post-mitotic cell types such as terminally differentiated cells, or 3D cultures?

In the manuscript, we have tested in post-mitotic cells such as primary hepatocytes and found active gene integration. We are continuing to explore activity in our cell types like neurons.

 

4. Once the integrase has inserted the transgene or sequence of interest, the inserted sequence still remains flanked with the AttL/AttR sequences. Do the authors propose any consequences of these genomic scars for therapeutic gene integration, such as effects on gene regulation, transcription, splicing etc.?

We are going to follow up on the effects of the minimal scars on gene expression. For intronic gene insertion there likely should not be an effect. We also show that the scars can be used as protein linkers for in-frame tagging or other in-frame applications.

 

5. Would the authors expect expression of a ‘PASTE-ed’ sequence if it is inserted into a heterochromatic region?

Without using an exogenous promoter, I would not expect an inserted gene to express unless near a promoter or enhancer.

 

 

Have your say

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sign up to customise the site to your preferences and to receive alerts

Register here

Also in the bioengineering category:

Green synthesized silver nanoparticles from Moringa: Potential for preventative treatment of SARS-CoV-2 contaminated water

Adebayo J. Bello, Omorilewa B. Ebunoluwa, Rukayat O. Ayorinde, et al.

Selected by 14 November 2024

Safieh Shah, Benjamin Dominik Maier

Epidemiology

Engineered Nanotopographies Induce Transient Openings in the Nuclear Membrane

Einollah Sarikhani, Vrund Patel, Zhi Li, et al.

Selected by 23 September 2024

Sristilekha Nath

Bioengineering

Scalable and efficient generation of mouse primordial germ cell-like cells

Xinbao Ding, Liangdao Li, Jingyi Gao, et al.

Selected by 05 March 2024

Carly Guiltinan

Cell Biology

Also in the cell biology category:

Motor Clustering Enhances Kinesin-driven Vesicle Transport

Rui Jiang, Qingzhou Feng, Daguan Nong, et al.

Selected by 16 November 2024

Sharvari Pitke

Biophysics

Cellular signalling protrusions enable dynamic distant contacts in spinal cord neurogenesis

Joshua Hawley, Robert Lea, Veronica Biga, et al.

Selected by 15 November 2024

Ankita Walvekar

Developmental Biology

Green synthesized silver nanoparticles from Moringa: Potential for preventative treatment of SARS-CoV-2 contaminated water

Adebayo J. Bello, Omorilewa B. Ebunoluwa, Rukayat O. Ayorinde, et al.

Selected by 14 November 2024

Safieh Shah, Benjamin Dominik Maier

Epidemiology

Also in the genomics category:

A fine kinetic balance of interactions directs transcription factor hubs to genes

Apratim Mukherjee, Samantha Fallacaro, Puttachai Ratchasanmuang, et al.

Selected by 23 July 2024

Deevitha Balasubramanian

Genomics

Enhancer-driven cell type comparison reveals similarities between the mammalian and bird pallium

Nikolai Hecker , Niklas Kempynck , David Mauduit, et al.

Selected by 02 July 2024

Rodrigo Senovilla-Ganzo

Bioinformatics

Modular control of time and space during vertebrate axis segmentation

Ali Seleit, Ian Brettell, Tomas Fitzgerald, et al.

AND

Natural genetic variation quantitatively regulates heart rate and dimension

Jakob Gierten, Bettina Welz, Tomas Fitzgerald, et al.

Selected by 24 June 2024

Girish Kale, Jennifer Ann Black

Developmental Biology

Also in the molecular biology category:

Green synthesized silver nanoparticles from Moringa: Potential for preventative treatment of SARS-CoV-2 contaminated water

Adebayo J. Bello, Omorilewa B. Ebunoluwa, Rukayat O. Ayorinde, et al.

Selected by 14 November 2024

Safieh Shah, Benjamin Dominik Maier

Epidemiology

Non-disruptive inducible labeling of ER-membrane contact sites using the Lamin B Receptor

Laura Downie, Nuria Ferrandiz, Megan Jones, et al.

Selected by 15 October 2024

Jonathan Townson

Cell Biology

HIF1A contributes to the survival of aneuploid and mosaic pre-implantation embryos

Estefania Sanchez-Vasquez, Marianne E. Bronner, Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz

Selected by 11 October 2024

Anchel De Jaime Soguero

Developmental Biology

Also in the synthetic biology category:

Enhancer cooperativity can compensate for loss of activity over large genomic distances

Henry Thomas, Songjie Feng, Marie Huber, et al.

Selected by 10 June 2024

Milan Antonovic

Genomics

Discovery and Validation of Context-Dependent Synthetic Mammalian Promoters

Adam M. Zahm, William S. Owens, Samuel R. Himes, et al.

Selected by 21 June 2023

Jessica L. Teo

Synthetic Biology

Genetically encoded multimeric tags for intracellular protein localisation in cryo-EM

Herman KH Fung, Yuki Hayashi, Veijo T Salo, et al.

Selected by 16 January 2023

Martyna Kosno-Vega

Biophysics

Also in the cell biology category:

BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting

This preList features preprints that were discussed and presented during the BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting in Birmingham, UK in April 2024. Kindly put together by Sara Morais da Silva, Reviews Editor at Journal of Cell Science.

 



List by Reinier Prosee

‘In preprints’ from Development 2022-2023

A list of the preprints featured in Development's 'In preprints' articles between 2022-2023

 



List by Alex Eve, Katherine Brown

preLights peer support – preprints of interest

This is a preprint repository to organise the preprints and preLights covered through the 'preLights peer support' initiative.

 



List by preLights peer support

The Society for Developmental Biology 82nd Annual Meeting

This preList is made up of the preprints discussed during the Society for Developmental Biology 82nd Annual Meeting that took place in Chicago in July 2023.

 



List by Joyce Yu, Katherine Brown

CSHL 87th Symposium: Stem Cells

Preprints mentioned by speakers at the #CSHLsymp23

 



List by Alex Eve

Journal of Cell Science meeting ‘Imaging Cell Dynamics’

This preList highlights the preprints discussed at the JCS meeting 'Imaging Cell Dynamics'. The meeting was held from 14 - 17 May 2023 in Lisbon, Portugal and was organised by Erika Holzbaur, Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, Rob Parton and Michael Way.

 



List by Helen Zenner

9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination

This preList contains preprints discussed during the 9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination. This conference was held in Kona, Hawaii from April 17th to 21st 2023.

 



List by Martin Estermann

Alumni picks – preLights 5th Birthday

This preList contains preprints that were picked and highlighted by preLights Alumni - an initiative that was set up to mark preLights 5th birthday. More entries will follow throughout February and March 2023.

 



List by Sergio Menchero et al.

CellBio 2022 – An ASCB/EMBO Meeting

This preLists features preprints that were discussed and presented during the CellBio 2022 meeting in Washington, DC in December 2022.

 



List by Nadja Hümpfer et al.

Fibroblasts

The advances in fibroblast biology preList explores the recent discoveries and preprints of the fibroblast world. Get ready to immerse yourself with this list created for fibroblasts aficionados and lovers, and beyond. Here, my goal is to include preprints of fibroblast biology, heterogeneity, fate, extracellular matrix, behavior, topography, single-cell atlases, spatial transcriptomics, and their matrix!

 



List by Osvaldo Contreras

EMBL Synthetic Morphogenesis: From Gene Circuits to Tissue Architecture (2021)

A list of preprints mentioned at the #EESmorphoG virtual meeting in 2021.

 



List by Alex Eve

FENS 2020

A collection of preprints presented during the virtual meeting of the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) in 2020

 



List by Ana Dorrego-Rivas

Planar Cell Polarity – PCP

This preList contains preprints about the latest findings on Planar Cell Polarity (PCP) in various model organisms at the molecular, cellular and tissue levels.

 



List by Ana Dorrego-Rivas

BioMalPar XVI: Biology and Pathology of the Malaria Parasite

[under construction] Preprints presented at the (fully virtual) EMBL BioMalPar XVI, 17-18 May 2020 #emblmalaria

 



List by Dey Lab, Samantha Seah

1

Cell Polarity

Recent research from the field of cell polarity is summarized in this list of preprints. It comprises of studies focusing on various forms of cell polarity ranging from epithelial polarity, planar cell polarity to front-to-rear polarity.

 



List by Yamini Ravichandran

TAGC 2020

Preprints recently presented at the virtual Allied Genetics Conference, April 22-26, 2020. #TAGC20

 



List by Maiko Kitaoka et al.

3D Gastruloids

A curated list of preprints related to Gastruloids (in vitro models of early development obtained by 3D aggregation of embryonic cells). Updated until July 2021.

 



List by Paul Gerald L. Sanchez and Stefano Vianello

ECFG15 – Fungal biology

Preprints presented at 15th European Conference on Fungal Genetics 17-20 February 2020 Rome

 



List by Hiral Shah

ASCB EMBO Annual Meeting 2019

A collection of preprints presented at the 2019 ASCB EMBO Meeting in Washington, DC (December 7-11)

 



List by Madhuja Samaddar et al.

EMBL Seeing is Believing – Imaging the Molecular Processes of Life

Preprints discussed at the 2019 edition of Seeing is Believing, at EMBL Heidelberg from the 9th-12th October 2019

 



List by Dey Lab

Autophagy

Preprints on autophagy and lysosomal degradation and its role in neurodegeneration and disease. Includes molecular mechanisms, upstream signalling and regulation as well as studies on pharmaceutical interventions to upregulate the process.

 



List by Sandra Malmgren Hill

Lung Disease and Regeneration

This preprint list compiles highlights from the field of lung biology.

 



List by Rob Hynds

Cellular metabolism

A curated list of preprints related to cellular metabolism at Biorxiv by Pablo Ranea Robles from the Prelights community. Special interest on lipid metabolism, peroxisomes and mitochondria.

 



List by Pablo Ranea Robles

BSCB/BSDB Annual Meeting 2019

Preprints presented at the BSCB/BSDB Annual Meeting 2019

 



List by Dey Lab

MitoList

This list of preprints is focused on work expanding our knowledge on mitochondria in any organism, tissue or cell type, from the normal biology to the pathology.

 



List by Sandra Franco Iborra

Biophysical Society Annual Meeting 2019

Few of the preprints that were discussed in the recent BPS annual meeting at Baltimore, USA

 



List by Joseph Jose Thottacherry

ASCB/EMBO Annual Meeting 2018

This list relates to preprints that were discussed at the recent ASCB conference.

 



List by Dey Lab, Amanda Haage

Also in the genomics category:

BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting

This preList features preprints that were discussed and presented during the BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting in Birmingham, UK in April 2024. Kindly put together by Sara Morais da Silva, Reviews Editor at Journal of Cell Science.

 



List by Reinier Prosee

9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination

This preList contains preprints discussed during the 9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination. This conference was held in Kona, Hawaii from April 17th to 21st 2023.

 



List by Martin Estermann

Semmelweis Symposium 2022: 40th anniversary of international medical education at Semmelweis University

This preList contains preprints discussed during the 'Semmelweis Symposium 2022' (7-9 November), organised around the 40th anniversary of international medical education at Semmelweis University covering a wide range of topics.

 



List by Nándor Lipták

20th “Genetics Workshops in Hungary”, Szeged (25th, September)

In this annual conference, Hungarian geneticists, biochemists and biotechnologists presented their works. Link: http://group.szbk.u-szeged.hu/minikonf/archive/prg2021.pdf

 



List by Nándor Lipták

EMBL Conference: From functional genomics to systems biology

Preprints presented at the virtual EMBL conference "from functional genomics and systems biology", 16-19 November 2020

 



List by Jesus Victorino

TAGC 2020

Preprints recently presented at the virtual Allied Genetics Conference, April 22-26, 2020. #TAGC20

 



List by Maiko Kitaoka et al.

Zebrafish immunology

A compilation of cutting-edge research that uses the zebrafish as a model system to elucidate novel immunological mechanisms in health and disease.

 



List by Shikha Nayar

Also in the molecular biology category:

2024 Hypothalamus GRC

This 2024 Hypothalamus GRC (Gordon Research Conference) preList offers an overview of cutting-edge research focused on the hypothalamus, a critical brain region involved in regulating homeostasis, behavior, and neuroendocrine functions. The studies included cover a range of topics, including neural circuits, molecular mechanisms, and the role of the hypothalamus in health and disease. This collection highlights some of the latest advances in understanding hypothalamic function, with potential implications for treating disorders such as obesity, stress, and metabolic diseases.

 



List by Nathalie Krauth

BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting

This preList features preprints that were discussed and presented during the BSCB-Biochemical Society 2024 Cell Migration meeting in Birmingham, UK in April 2024. Kindly put together by Sara Morais da Silva, Reviews Editor at Journal of Cell Science.

 



List by Reinier Prosee

‘In preprints’ from Development 2022-2023

A list of the preprints featured in Development's 'In preprints' articles between 2022-2023

 



List by Alex Eve, Katherine Brown

CSHL 87th Symposium: Stem Cells

Preprints mentioned by speakers at the #CSHLsymp23

 



List by Alex Eve

9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination

This preList contains preprints discussed during the 9th International Symposium on the Biology of Vertebrate Sex Determination. This conference was held in Kona, Hawaii from April 17th to 21st 2023.

 



List by Martin Estermann

Alumni picks – preLights 5th Birthday

This preList contains preprints that were picked and highlighted by preLights Alumni - an initiative that was set up to mark preLights 5th birthday. More entries will follow throughout February and March 2023.

 



List by Sergio Menchero et al.

CellBio 2022 – An ASCB/EMBO Meeting

This preLists features preprints that were discussed and presented during the CellBio 2022 meeting in Washington, DC in December 2022.

 



List by Nadja Hümpfer et al.

EMBL Synthetic Morphogenesis: From Gene Circuits to Tissue Architecture (2021)

A list of preprints mentioned at the #EESmorphoG virtual meeting in 2021.

 



List by Alex Eve

FENS 2020

A collection of preprints presented during the virtual meeting of the Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS) in 2020

 



List by Ana Dorrego-Rivas

ECFG15 – Fungal biology

Preprints presented at 15th European Conference on Fungal Genetics 17-20 February 2020 Rome

 



List by Hiral Shah

ASCB EMBO Annual Meeting 2019

A collection of preprints presented at the 2019 ASCB EMBO Meeting in Washington, DC (December 7-11)

 



List by Madhuja Samaddar et al.

Lung Disease and Regeneration

This preprint list compiles highlights from the field of lung biology.

 



List by Rob Hynds

MitoList

This list of preprints is focused on work expanding our knowledge on mitochondria in any organism, tissue or cell type, from the normal biology to the pathology.

 



List by Sandra Franco Iborra
Close