Back to All Events

Selective RNA pseudouridinylation using circular gRNA in designer organelles

Join the next #EUSynBioSeminar and hear Lukas Schartel from the International Max Planck Research School (IMPRS) of Cellular Biophysics give a talk titled "Selective RNA pseudouridinylation using circular gRNA in designer organelles."

RNA modifications play a pivotal role in the regulation of RNA chemistry within cells. Several technologies have been developed with the goal of using RNA modifications to regulate cellular biochemistry selectively, but achieving selective and precise modifications remains a challenge. Using designer organelles, we can modify mRNA with pseudouridine in a highly selective and guide-RNA-dependent manner. These designer organelles are based on the principle of phase separation, a central tenet in developing artificial membraneless organelles in living mammalian cells. In addition, we used circular guide RNAs to markedly enhance the effectiveness of targeted pseudouridinylation. Our studies offer spatial engineering by means of optimized RNA editing organelles (OREO) as a complementary tool in using targeted RNA modification to expand potential avenues for future investigation.


Register here to join us on the 21st of November at 16:00 CET

Previous
Previous
25 June

Programmable Molecular Factories: Synthetic Biology for Resource Production

Next
Next
12 December

From resonance to chaos: modulating spatiotemporal patterns through a synthetic optogenetic oscillator