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. 2020 Feb 10;21(3):1172. doi: 10.3390/ijms21031172

Table 1.

Systems for Cancer Functional Genomics.

Mutagenesis System Advantages Disadvantages
CRISPR/Cas9
  • Genome wide

  • Useful in loss and gain of function studies

  • Bias can be eliminated by careful guide RNA library design

  • Difficult to employ in primary cells, useful in only established cell lines

  • Difficult to employ in vivo

  • Difficult to select for phenotypes requiring multiple cooperating genetic alterations

Transposon
  • Genome wide

  • Useful in loss and gain of function studies

  • Allows screens to be done in cell lines or primary cells in vivo

  • Useful for selection of traits requiring multiple cooperating mutations

  • Non-coding or regulatory regions of the genome can be identified

  • Bias for or against parts of the genome due to local hopping and insertion site preference

  • Some genes are unlikely to be activated by transposon insertion if first ATG is in exon 1

  • Some genes are unlikely to be inactivated due to their small size (e.g., microRNAs)

  • Does not induce the full spectrum of mutations found in human cancers (e.g., point mutations and translocations)

  • Transposon mutagenesis can create mutations not tagged by the transposon due to re-mobilization

Retroviruses
  • Many have been isolated with various tissue tropisms

  • Can activate endogenous promoters by enhancement mechanisms

  • Do not require generation of new transgenic lines of mice

  • Tend to not induce loss of function mutations, relatively few tumor suppressor genes identified in screens

  • Systems generally found and not created, meaning there are no retroviruses useful for modeling many important types of cancer

  • Tissue tropisms limit usefulness and types of cancer that can be modeled

  • Generally, cells must be dividing for infection

  • Many retroviruses have severe strain-specific effects and limitations