Aim
This workshop provides a practical, concept-to-design understanding of CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing. Participants will learn how CRISPR-Cas9 works, how to select targets and design guide RNAs, how editing outcomes are generated (NHEJ vs HDR), and how to plan validation workflows. The workshop focuses on building real experiment planning skills—so learners can confidently design a CRISPR editing strategy for research, functional genomics, or biotechnology applications.
Workshop Objectives
- Understand CRISPR-Cas9 Mechanism: Learn how Cas9 and guide RNA create targeted DNA edits.
- Guide RNA Design Skills: Identify target regions and design gRNAs with specificity in mind.
- Edit Outcome Understanding: Understand NHEJ (knockout) and HDR (precise edits) and when to use each.
- Minimize Off-Targets: Learn key factors that cause off-target editing and how to reduce risk.
- Plan Experiments Correctly: Choose delivery methods, controls, and validation strategies.
- Responsible Use: Understand ethical and biosafety considerations in genome editing.
- Hands-on Outcome: Build a complete CRISPR experiment plan as the final output.
Workshop Structure
Module 1: CRISPR Basics (What You Need Before Editing)
- CRISPR history and why Cas9 became a game-changer.
- Key components: gRNA, PAM, Cas9 nuclease, target DNA.
- How CRISPR finds and cuts DNA (simple, step-by-step explanation).
- CRISPR vs older genome editing tools (TALENs, ZFNs) overview.
Module 2: Designing a CRISPR Editing Strategy
- Defining the biological goal: knockout, knock-in, correction, tagging.
- Choosing target regions: exons, functional domains, isoforms, splice variants.
- Editing outcomes: what happens after the cut and why results vary.
- Project planning checklist: what must be decided before ordering reagents.
Module 3: gRNA Design Principles (Potency + Specificity)
- What makes a good gRNA: sequence features and PAM constraints.
- Off-target risks: mismatches, seed region, repetitive sequences.
- Ranking gRNAs: balancing on-target efficiency and specificity.
- Hands-on workflow: designing 3–5 gRNAs for a chosen gene (tool-based approach).
Module 4: Repair Pathways (NHEJ vs HDR) and Editing Outcomes
- NHEJ for gene knockout: indels and frameshift logic.
- HDR for precise edits: donor design basics (ssODN/plasmid donors concept).
- Improving HDR efficiency: timing, cell cycle, and experimental strategies (overview).
- Common outcome issues: mosaicism, partial edits, unexpected indels.
Module 5: Delivery Methods & Experimental Setup
- Delivery options: plasmid, mRNA, RNP (riboprotein complex) overview.
- Transfection/transduction basics (conceptual): cells, reagents, and optimization.
- Controls that matter: non-targeting controls, positive controls, mock control.
- Safety basics: handling, containment, and responsible lab practices.
Module 6: Validation & Quality Control (Proving Your Edit Worked)
- Genotyping strategy: PCR design, amplicon sizing, sequencing options.
- T7E1/Surveyor assays (concept) and when sequencing is better.
- Protein-level validation: Western blot/functional assays overview.
- Interpreting results and troubleshooting weak or mixed edits.
Module 7: Applications in Research and Biotechnology
- Functional genomics: gene function discovery and pathway mapping.
- Disease models: cell lines, organoids, and animal models (overview).
- Biotech applications: agriculture, industrial biology, diagnostics (overview).
- Clinical frontier overview: gene therapy basics and safety concerns.
Module 8: Ethics, Biosafety & Responsible Genome Editing
- Ethical boundaries: somatic vs germline editing and why it matters.
- Risk awareness: off-target effects, unintended consequences, and misuse concerns.
- Data integrity: documentation, transparency, and reproducible reporting.
- Responsible communication: avoiding overclaiming and hype.
Final Project
- Create a complete CRISPR-Cas9 Experiment Plan for a target gene.
- Include: biological goal, target region, 3–5 gRNAs, predicted off-target strategy, delivery plan, controls, and validation workflow.
- Example projects: knockout a pathway regulator, tag a protein with GFP (concept), correct a point mutation (concept), screen design for a cancer gene.
Participant Eligibility
- UG/PG/PhD students in Biotechnology, Genetics, Molecular Biology, Bioinformatics, or related fields
- Researchers planning genome editing or functional genomics projects
- Industry professionals exploring CRISPR workflows in R&D
- Basic understanding of gene expression and molecular biology is recommended
Workshop Outcomes
- CRISPR Concept Clarity: Understand how CRISPR-Cas9 editing works end-to-end.
- Design Skill: Ability to design gRNAs and choose strategy (NHEJ vs HDR) based on goals.
- Experiment Readiness: Build a complete plan with controls and validation steps.
- Off-Target Awareness: Know how to reduce risk and interpret results responsibly.
- Portfolio Deliverable: A CRISPR experiment plan you can present for research or internships.
Workshop Deliverables
- Access to e-LMS: Full access to learning materials and reference resources.
- Design Toolkit: gRNA design checklist, control planning sheet, validation workflow template.
- Hands-on Exercises: Guided design tasks and interpretation practice.
- Final Assessment: Certification after completion of assignments + final project submission.
- e-Certification and e-Marksheet: Digital credentials provided upon successful completion.
Future Career Prospects
- Genome Editing Research Intern / Associate
- CRISPR Laboratory Assistant / Research Assistant
- Functional Genomics Associate
- Biotech R&D Support (CRISPR pipelines)
- Gene Editing Strategy Support (Bioinformatics / Wet lab interface)
Job Opportunities
- Academic Research Labs: Genome engineering and functional genomics groups.
- Biotech & Pharma: Target validation, cell line engineering, and discovery research teams.
- CROs: Molecular biology, assay development, and genome editing service teams.
- Agritech & Industrial Biotech: Crop improvement, microbial engineering, and applied genome editing.









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