How does gene editing with CRISPR-Cas9 actually work?

CRISPR-Cas9 is like having a special pair of scissors that can cut and fix letters in a very long book, the DNA.

Imagine your favorite storybook has a few spelling mistakes, and you want to change just one word so the whole story makes more sense. That’s what CRISPR-Cas9 does inside our cells: it finds a specific spot in the DNA and lets us change that part of the "story."

How It Works

First, Cas9 is like a super-sharp pair of scissors. It needs something to tell it where to cut, that's where CRISPR comes in.

Think of CRISPR as a special map or guide. It helps Cas9 find the exact spot in the DNA that needs fixing, just like how you use a map to find your favorite toy in your room.

Once Cas9 cuts the DNA at that spot, scientists can add, remove, or change letters, which are like the building blocks of our body’s instructions. This lets them fix mistakes or even make new ones for fun or health reasons!

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. A scientist uses CRISPR-Cas9 to fix a broken gene in a plant, making it grow better.
  2. CRISPR-Cas9 is like a pair of molecular scissors that cut DNA at specific spots.
  3. Imagine changing one letter in a long sentence, that's what CRISPR does with genes.

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity

Categories: Biology · CRISPR· gene editing· Cas9