August, 2025
August 2025
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
Wolfgang Miesbach: CRISPR’s Hidden Danger – Precision Enhancers May Cause Genomic Chaos
Aug 11, 2025, 13:46

Wolfgang Miesbach: CRISPR’s Hidden Danger – Precision Enhancers May Cause Genomic Chaos

Wolfgang Miesbach, Head of the Department of Haemostaseology and the Haemophilia Center of Medical Clinic 2 and Professor of Medicine at Frankfurt University Hospital, shared a post on LinkedIn about a paper by Clotilde Aussel et al. published in Nature Communications:

“CRISPR’s hidden danger: New Nature Communication from genome editing safety experts Toni Cathomen, Carla Fuster García, and Clotilde Aussel reveals concerns about ‘precision’ enhancers!

Beyond Off-Target Effects: A Worse Problem: The field has been focused on off-target effects (off-target sites prediction, and off-target activity measurement)- where CRISPR cuts at unintended sites with similar sequences to the target.

But this study reveals something potentially worse: structural variations (SVs), including massive chromosomal chaos that happens even at the intended target site.

DNA-PKcs inhibitors like AZD7648 – compounds used to make CRISPR more precise by promoting homology-directed repair (HDR) over error-prone repair – cause a 1000-fold increase in chromosomal translocations.

The Catastrophic Outcomes:

  • Megabase-scale deletions spanning millions of DNA bases
  • 47.8% of cells losing entire chromosome arms
  • Kilobase-scale deletions increased up to 35-fold
  • Chromosomal translocations between different chromosomes
  • Chromothripsis – catastrophic chromosome shattering

Clinical Reality Check:

Casgevy – the first approved CRISPR therapy – targets BCL11A for sickle cell disease. BCL11A editing frequently causes large kilobase-scale deletions in stem cells. 8% of African ancestry patients carry variants creating additional off-target sites.

Repair Pathway Problem:

In human cells, there are two main DNA repair pathways after CRISPR cuts:

  • NHEJ (Non-Homologous End Joining) fast but error-prone
  • HDR (Homology-Directed Repair) precise but inefficient

By inhibiting DNA-PKcs to boost HDR, researchers accidentally created genomic chaos.

Detection Crisis:

Standard sequencing completely misses these changes because large deletions remove PCR primer sites, making them ‘invisible’ and leading to massive overestimation of success rates.

Solutions From the Authors:

The authors discuss better detection methods (CAST-Seq, long-read sequencing), safer enhancement approaches(53BP1 inhibition), alternative strategies (base editors), and rethinking necessity of ultra-high efficiency.

Their conclusion: We need ‘holistic, treatment-centered evaluation of both off-target and aberrant on-target effects to ensure therapeutic efficacy is not achieved at the expense of unintended consequences’.”

Title: The hidden risks of CRISPR/Cas: structural variations and genome integrity

Authors: Clotilde Aussel, Toni Cathomen, Carla Fuster-García

You can read the Full Article on Nature Communications.

Wolfgang Miesbach: CRISPR’s Hidden Danger - Precision Enhancers May Cause Genomic Chaos

More posts featuring Wolfgang Miesbach.