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Expanding the Toolbox for Mammalian Genome Engineering
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Across biomanufacturing, disease modeling, synthetic biology, and cell therapy development, researchers increasingly need to insert large DNA constructs into mammalian genomes. Yet despite significant advances in genome editing technologies over the past decade, integrating large DNA payloads into mammalian genomes efficiently, site-specifically, and safely has remained a challenge.
Cell line developers are engineering bigger
For cell therapy applications, simple chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) designs are no longer sufficient. Next-generation constructs incorporate logic gating, safety switches, multiple signaling domains, and regulatory elements. At the same time, many therapeutic strategies require expression of full-length genes to address loss-of-function mutations—no small task, given that the median human gene length is 24–27 kb.
This challenge extends to biomanufacturing and synthetic biology, where multi-gene constructs and synthetic promoters lead to large expression cassettes.1,2
Why conventional knock-in approaches struggle
Most targeted genome editing strategies rely on homology-directed repair (HDR) following a CRISPR-induced DNA double-strand break. While this method works well for small edits, there is a risk of off-target events. In addition, low efficiency makes it difficult to generate inserts greater than 3–5 kb and, since HDR requires an active cell cycle and DNA repair, this method is not usable for non-dividing cells.
Random integration approaches, including lentiviral vectors and transposon systems, can improve insertion efficiency but at the cost of control. DNA integrates at unpredictable genomic locations, often resulting in multiple copies and highly variable expression, which extends timelines by requiring clone screening and selection.
Large serine recombinases provide a partial solution
Large serine recombinases enable efficient, site-specific integration of large DNA payloads without relying on cellular repair pathways. With optimization, these systems can accommodate multi-gene constructs and full-length genes with high efficiency.3
However, integration site still matters. Without a defined genomic target, expression of inserted constructs can vary due to chromatin context, leading to inconsistent performance across clones.

Targeted large knock-ins with TARGATT
technology
TARGATT
technology addresses the large knock-in challenge by combining efficient, site-specific integration using a large serine recombinase with a validated genomic target site.
In this approach, a TARGATT landing pad is established at the H11 safe harbor locus, enabling precise insertion of large DNA constructs into a location that supports robust, stable, and uniform gene expression. By directing integration to this single, well-characterized site, TARGATT technology enables consistent expression within cell populations—streamlining cell line development for biomanufacturing and therapeutic applications.
This strategy provides several key advantages:
- Efficient integration of large DNA payloads, including multi-gene constructs and multiple expression cassettes4
- Targeted insertion at the H11 safe harbor locus
- Single-copy, defined genomic integration
- Reduced clonal variability and screening burden
- Enables pool-based screening
- Reproducible expression across engineered cell lines
Because each construct is inserted into the same genomic location, developers can generate cell lines with greater predictability significantly reducing the time and effort required for clone screening and selection.
Toward more predictable cell engineering
From advanced CAR-T designs to multi-gene therapeutic constructs and synthetic biology circuits, many next-generation applications depend on stable integration of large genetic payloads.
By pairing efficient large DNA integration with the proven H11 safe harbor locus, TARGATT technology enables a more controlled and reproducible approach to mammalian cell engineering—helping researchers move beyond the traditional limitations of large knock-ins.
References
1. Joshua Mayne, et al. Billion-Scale Deciphering of Human Gene Regulatory Grammar. BioRxiv 2025.11.10.687627.
2. Leonid Gaidukov, et al. A multi-landing pad DNA integration platform for mammalian cell engineering. Nucleic Acids Res. 2018 May 4;46(8):4072-4086. doi: 10.1093/nar/gky216.
3. W. Marshal Stark. Making serine integrases work for us. Curr Opin Microbiol. 2017 Aug:38:130-136. doi: 10.1016/j.mib.2017.04.006.
4. Applied StemCell. Expanding the capabilities of targeted integration. Published December 18, 2025.

See how TARGATT technology can help you engineer bigger by visiting appliedstemcell.com/targatt-technology.
The post Expanding the Toolbox for Mammalian Genome Engineering appeared first on GEN – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News.
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Gilead Swallows Another Partner, Paying up to $5B for ADC Specialist Tubulis
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STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re reading about FDA backing domestic production, another Gilead deal, and more
Rise and shine, everyone, another busy day is on the way. And it is getting off to a good start here on the Pharmalot campus, where clear blue skies and comfortable breezes are greeting us. Who could ask for anything more? Actually, we could — it is time to reheat the kettle for another cuppa stimulation. Our choice today is ginger peach. And here is a helpful tip — a teaspoon of honey enhances the flavors splendidly. Of course, you are invited to join us. For the full experience, we are now hawking replicas — take a look. Meanwhile, here are a few tidbits to help you along. As always, do keep in touch. We appreciate feedback, criticism, and tips. …
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration used the president’s budget to propose policies aimed at encouraging domestic development and manufacturing of drugs, STAT notes. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary has said the agency needs “giant, big ideas” to counter China’s dominance in early-stage clinical development of drugs. Among the FDA’s ideas are proposals to make it easier to run early-stage trials in the U.S. and to hand an advantage to U.S.-based generics manufacturers. The Trump administration has been using a variety of policy levers to try and bring drug manufacturing to the U.S. One of the legislative proposals in the FDA’s budget justification would let domestic manufacturers of generic drugs challenge brand drug patents a month before foreign companies, a major advantage in an intensely competitive process.
Two more drugmakers, AbbVie and Genentech, will officially start selling their medicines on the TrumpRx website, CBS News tells us. Abbvie, which struck a deal with the Trump administration in January to cut the cost of certain medicines, will sell Humira, a popular medication used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, and ulcerative colitis, on the site at an 86% discount. The prescription prices on the site, however, are only available to patients who are uninsured, or whose insurance does not cover it, and who must pay the full list price out of pocket. Those with insurance coverage generally pay lower prices already. TrumpRx now sells over 61 drugs at a lower price, up from about 40 when the website went live in February.
Rise and shine, everyone, another busy day is on the way. And it is getting off to a good start here on the Pharmalot campus, where clear blue skies and comfortable breezes are greeting us. Who could ask for anything more? Actually, we could — it is time to reheat the kettle for another cuppa stimulation. Our choice today is ginger peach. And here is a helpful tip — a teaspoon of honey enhances the flavors splendidly. Of course, you are invited to join us. For the full experience, we are now hawking replicas — take a look. Meanwhile, here are a few tidbits to help you along. As always, do keep in touch. We appreciate feedback, criticism, and tips. …
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration used the president’s budget to propose policies aimed at encouraging domestic development and manufacturing of drugs, STAT notes. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary has said the agency needs “giant, big ideas” to counter China’s dominance in early-stage clinical development of drugs. Among the FDA’s ideas are proposals to make it easier to run early-stage trials in the U.S. and to hand an advantage to U.S.-based generics manufacturers. The Trump administration has been using a variety of policy levers to try and bring drug manufacturing to the U.S. One of the legislative proposals in the FDA’s budget justification would let domestic manufacturers of generic drugs challenge brand drug patents a month before foreign companies, a major advantage in an intensely competitive process.
Two more drugmakers, AbbVie and Genentech, will officially start selling their medicines on the TrumpRx website, CBS News tells us. Abbvie, which struck a deal with the Trump administration in January to cut the cost of certain medicines, will sell Humira, a popular medication used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn’s disease, and ulcerative colitis, on the site at an 86% discount. The prescription prices on the site, however, are only available to patients who are uninsured, or whose insurance does not cover it, and who must pay the full list price out of pocket. Those with insurance coverage generally pay lower prices already. TrumpRx now sells over 61 drugs at a lower price, up from about 40 when the website went live in February.
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