Cas9 Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Cas9 stocks.

Cas9 Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 21 CRSP CRISPR Therapeutics AG (CRSP) Jefferies London Healthcare Conference (Transcript)
Nov 20 CRSP CRISPR Therapeutics Stock Falls 7% in Two Weeks: Time to Hold or Sell?
Nov 20 EDIT Editas Medicine, Inc. (EDIT) Presents at Stifel 2024 Healthcare Conference (Transcript)
Nov 20 CRSP CRISPR Therapeutics AG (CRSP): Among the Best Genomics Stocks to Buy Right Now
Nov 19 NTLA Intellia Therapeutics Announces Promising CRISPR Therapy Results
Nov 19 NTLA ReCode to secure funds for cystic fibrosis gene correction treatments
Nov 19 NTLA Intellia Therapeutics price target lowered to $70 from $80 at Wells Fargo
Nov 19 ABEO ABEO: FDA Accepts BLA Re-Submission for Pz-cel; PDUFA Date of April 29, 2025; Raising Valuation to $9.50…
Nov 19 NTLA Intellia Therapeutics' Gene Therapies Fall Short Of Breakthroughs (Rating Downgrade)
Nov 18 NTLA Intellia’s gene editing therapy shows early potential in rare heart condition
Nov 18 NTLA CRISPR therapy from Intellia may ameliorate rare heart disorder, data suggest
Nov 18 CRSP CRISPR therapy from Intellia may ameliorate rare heart disorder, data suggest
Nov 17 CRSP CRISPR Therapeutics AG (CRSP): Among ARK Invest’s Top Stock Picks for 2024
Nov 16 NTLA Intellia Announces First Clinical Evidence from Ongoing Phase 1 Study that Nexiguran Ziclumeran (nex-z), an In Vivo CRISPR/Cas9-Based Gene Editing Therapy, May Favorably Impact Disease Progression in Transthyretin (ATTR) Amyloidosis
Nov 16 CRSP 2 Top Biotech Stocks to Buy Now and Hold For 5 Years or More
Nov 15 CRSP CRISPR Therapeutics AG (CRSP) Guggenheim Inaugural Healthcare Innovation Conference (Transcript)
Nov 15 CRSP Where Will CRISPR Therapeutics Be in 3 Years?
Nov 15 ABEO Abeona Therapeutics Inc (ABEO) Q3 2024 Earnings Call Highlights: Strategic Advances Amid ...
Cas9

Cas9 (CRISPR associated protein 9) is an RNA-guided DNA endonuclease enzyme associated with the CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats) adaptive immunity system in Streptococcus pyogenes, among other bacteria. S. pyogenes utilizes Cas9 to memorize and later interrogate and cleave foreign DNA, such as invading bacteriophage DNA or plasmid DNA. Cas9 performs this interrogation by unwinding foreign DNA and checking for sites complementary to the 20 basepair spacer region of the guide RNA. If the DNA substrate is complementary to the guide RNA, Cas9 cleaves the invading DNA. In this sense, the CRISPR-Cas9 mechanism has a number of parallels with the RNA interference (RNAi) mechanism in eukaryotes.
Apart from its original function in bacterial immunity, the Cas9 protein has been heavily utilized as a genome engineering tool to induce site-directed double strand breaks in DNA. These breaks can lead to gene inactivation or the introduction of heterologous genes through non-homologous end joining and homologous recombination respectively in many laboratory model organisms. Alongside zinc finger nucleases and TALEN proteins, Cas9 is becoming a prominent tool in the field of genome editing.
Cas9 has gained traction in recent years because it can cleave nearly any sequence complementary to the guide RNA. Because the target specificity of Cas9 stems from the guide RNA:DNA complementarity and not modifications to the protein itself (like TALENs and Zinc-fingers), engineering Cas9 to target new DNA is straightforward. Versions of Cas9 that bind but do not cleave cognate DNA can be used to localize transcriptional activator or repressors to specific DNA sequences in order to control transcriptional activation and repression. While native Cas9 requires a guide RNA composed of two disparate RNAs that associate to make the guide – the CRISPR RNA (crRNA), and the trans-activating RNA (tracrRNA)., Cas9 targeting has been simplified through the engineering of a chimeric single guide RNA (chiRNA). Scientists have suggested that Cas9-based gene drives may be capable of editing the genomes of entire populations of organisms. In 2015, Cas9 was used to modify the genome of human embryos for the first time.

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