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A few ideas spring to mind:1) Maybe the edited cells were no-viable and were lost to follow up?2) Maybe the strand-breaks introduced by CRISPR were repaired using a complementary sequence from the other parallel genome, as you surmise, rather than the guide sequence? - there is a precedent for a strange thing like 2) happening: When scientists "fixed" human embryos carrying a defect in a gene linked to a form of developmental heart condition, they found that the error was fixed from the complementary region of the corresponding healthy chromosome, rather than the supplied patch. Might this happening in your plants?
Hi, thanks for your reply!!I'm a little confused, what do you mean by 'lost to follow up'? Thanks for sending that article as well that is very interesting and I hadn't come across that at all, the only worrying thing is that our CRISPR/Cas9 constructs should only have edited using NHEJ which is itself a 'repairing' mechanism, all be it a faulty one, not HDR. Or was that not what you mean?Thanks again! Quote from: chris on 15/12/2017 23:27:43A few ideas spring to mind:1) Maybe the edited cells were no-viable and were lost to follow up?2) Maybe the strand-breaks introduced by CRISPR were repaired using a complementary sequence from the other parallel genome, as you surmise, rather than the guide sequence? - there is a precedent for a strange thing like 2) happening: When scientists "fixed" human embryos carrying a defect in a gene linked to a form of developmental heart condition, they found that the error was fixed from the complementary region of the corresponding healthy chromosome, rather than the supplied patch. Might this happening in your plants?