CRISPR is like a special scissors that can cut and change parts of our DNA, helping us fix mistakes or make new ones.
Imagine your favorite storybook has some typos, maybe the word “cat” is spelled “cet.” That makes it hard to read. CRISPR acts like a magic eraser and pencil, letting you find that typo, erase it, and write the correct letter in its place.
How It Finds the Mistake
CRISPR uses something called a guide RNA, think of it as a map or a little robot that knows exactly where to go in the book. This guide takes the special scissors (called Cas9) right to the typo so they can cut it out.
How It Fixes the Mistake
Once the mistake is cut out, you can add in a new letter, like using a pencil to write the correct word. Sometimes, you just erase the wrong part and let the book fix itself by closing up the gap. Other times, you might insert a brand-new letter or even a whole new sentence.
It’s like having a super-powered editor that helps your storybook become perfect again, one typo at a time!
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See also
- Why do certain foods trigger allergic reactions in humans?
- What are insertion or deletion mutations?
- How are personalized gene therapies and CRISPR advancing medicine?
- Why Do People Have Different Shapes of Faces?
- Why Do Some People Have a Sixth Sense for Finding Things?