Australian scientists are using Gene Shears to fight disease.
Many diseases that affect animals and plants are caused by a viral infection. Examples of such a disease is HIV/AIDS in humans. In an infected cell, a portion of the virus DNA causes production of a particular protein resulting in the symptoms of the disease.
In 1986, Australian scientists Jim Haseloff and Wayne Gerlach of the CSIRO Division of Plant Industry were researching the structure of a plant virus when they made a surprising and very significant discovery. They found that they could design and create bits of genetic material, called “hammerhead ribozymes”, that could selectively cut out bits of unwanted or harmful DNA. This snipping action led researchers to call them “Gene Shears”.
Genes are made of DNA, which is a molecule that looks a bit like a twisted ladder. This shape is called a double helix.
The importance of this research was quickly realised, and in 1989 Gene Shears Pty Ltd was formed by CSIRO to commercialise the use of the technique and to fund further research.
Our individual genes are a bit like secret codes. Living cells decode the genes. The message received through these codes provides a base for the production of specific proteins.
Some DNA can be a code that makes a disease-causing protein. Gene shears find that DNA and destroy it before it can make the protein.
The “Gene Shears” technology involves firstly decoding a gene in an organism that produces a harmful protein. A hammerhead ribozyme is then specially designed to match to that gene code. An army of these specific ribozymes are sent into the cells of the organism. These ribozymes will find the matching code of the harmful protein and snip it out of the message, making it impossible to produce the disease-causing protein.
Initially, this technology was only used on viruses, but it is now seen as a very powerful tool against any gene that codes for a harmful or undesirable characteristic in any organism. The technique has multiple uses in many areas of genetic research. In agriculture, Gene Shears may be used to minimise crop and livestock disease, thus benefiting the environment by reducing the use of pesticides. In medical and pharmaceutical research, Gene Shears is being used extensively in the fight against viruses such as HIV/AIDS. Researchers hope that in the future, it will be used as therapy against genetically inherited diseases.
CSIRO's Australia Advances http://www.csiro.au/promos/ozadvances
The Australian Academy of Science’s Nova http://www.science.org.au/nova
The Australian Science Archive Project http://www.asap.unimelb.edu.au/