splicingin
Splicingin is a term sometimes used in genetics and molecular biology to describe deliberate modification of RNA splicing by introducing new splice elements or exons into a gene or transcript. In practice, splicingin refers to strategies intended to alter which regions of a transcript are joined together during RNA processing, thereby changing the mature mRNA and the protein it encodes. The term is not widely standardized and appears mainly in discussions of experimental approaches to control splicing.
Mechanisms and methods: Splicingin can be achieved at the DNA level by genome editing to insert exons,
Applications: Splicingin is used in basic research to study gene function by comparing splice variants and
Challenges: Efficiency, tissue specificity, off-target effects, immunogenicity, and delivery are major hurdles. Ethical and regulatory considerations
See also: Splicing, spliceosome, exon skipping, splice-switching oligonucleotides, antisense therapy, trans-splicing.