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CRISPR-Mediated Intronic Knockin of Pre-amiRNA Enables Targeted Gene Silencing.

PubMed · 2026-05-14

Scientists used CRISPR gene editing to silence specific plant genes by tucking tiny genetic instructions into the plant's own non-coding DNA regions — a technique that works in targeted tissues and leaves no lasting foreign DNA behind. This advance could streamline both crop breeding and the study of how individual plant genes function.

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Inserting artificial microRNA precursors into plant gene introns via CRISPR/Cas9 successfully silenced target genes in a tissue-specific manner.

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The approach avoids persistent transgene expression, meaning the editing instructions don't remain as heritable foreign sequences passed to future plant generations.

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By piggybacking on the plant's existing microRNA processing system, the method achieves precise, endogenous-style gene regulation rather than relying on blunt over-expression of silencing constructs.

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