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The Gene Sculpt Suite: a set of tools for genome editing
Author(s) -
Carla M. Mann,
Gabriel MartínezGálvez,
Jordan M. Welker,
Wesley A. Wierson,
Hirotaka Ata,
Maira P. Almeida,
Karl J. Clark,
Jeffrey J. Essner,
Maura McGrail,
Stephen C. Ekker,
Drena Dobbs
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkz405
Subject(s) - genome editing , biology , transcription activator like effector nuclease , crispr , zinc finger nuclease , computational biology , suite , genome , cas9 , genetics , computer science , gene , history , archaeology
The discovery and development of DNA-editing nucleases (Zinc Finger Nucleases, TALENs, CRISPR/Cas systems) has given scientists the ability to precisely engineer or edit genomes as never before. Several different platforms, protocols and vectors for precision genome editing are now available, leading to the development of supporting web-based software. Here we present the Gene Sculpt Suite (GSS), which comprises three tools: (i) GTagHD, which automatically designs and generates oligonucleotides for use with the GeneWeld knock-in protocol; (ii) MEDJED, a machine learning method, which predicts the extent to which a double-stranded DNA break site will utilize the microhomology-mediated repair pathway; and (iii) MENTHU, a tool for identifying genomic locations likely to give rise to a single predominant microhomology-mediated end joining allele (PreMA) repair outcome. All tools in the GSS are freely available for download under the GPL v3.0 license and can be run locally on Windows, Mac and Linux systems capable of running R and/or Docker. The GSS is also freely available online at www.genesculpt.org.

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