CRISPR-based technologies promise transformative therapies, yet their success depends on the purity and quality of guide RNAs (gRNA).
During high-throughput screening of candidates, even small variations in gRNA purity can compromise reproducibility and confidence in results.
This whitepaper highlights a ligation-based workflow that enhances gRNA purity and yield, delivering consistent performance for demanding genome editing applications.
Download this whitepaper to discover:
- How high-purity gRNAs improve reproducibility in screening workflows
- A ligation-based workflow for enhanced gRNA manufacturing
- An experimental validation method and supporting data
trilinkbiotech.com | 1
Highly pure, reproducible guide RNA screening via ligationbased
synthesis platform
White paper
Features
• The critical role of gRNA purity in
high-throughput screening: CRISPR
success depends on selecting gRNAs
with high specificity and editing
efficiency. Inconsistent gRNA purity
undermines reproducibility, making
high-purity synthesis essential for
reliable screening and confident
candidate selection.
• A new workflow for gRNA
manufacturing: To address
persistent challenges in gRNA
manufacturing for high-throughput
screening, we developed a ligationbased
workflow that enhances purity
and consistency. This approach
minimizes synthesis-related
variability, enabling more reliable and
reproducible CRISPR results.
• Experimental validation and
supporting data: We evaluated
our ligation-based workflow
through experiments measuring
reproducibility and sequence
fidelity. The method consistently
delivers gRNAs with purities above
80% and reliable yields, supporting
uniform dosing for high-throughput
applications.
trilinkbiotech.com | 2
Introduction
Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) and CRISPR-associated protein (Cas) geneediting
technology is transforming the field of therapeutics, driving the development of both established and
emerging treatment modalities. The therapeutic potential of CRISPR-based technologies lies in their ability to
precisely modify the genome by introducing targeted edits at specific DNA sequences. This is achieved through
a custom-designed guide RNA (gRNA) that directs a Cas enzyme, such as SpCas9 or SaCas9, to the desired site,
where it creates a DNA break for repair and genetic modification. This can result in the correction of diseasecausing
mutations, the regulation of gene expression, or the disruption of harmful genetic elements, offering new
treatment strategies for a wide range of diseases 1.
The effectiveness of a CRISPR-based therapeutic depends on gRNA design and quality, which determines the
system’s specificity and efficiency 1. Thus, selecting an optimal gRNA is essential to ensure accurate editing
and minimize off-target effects that could impact efficacy. The gRNA selection process requires evaluation of
candidate gRNAs to identify those most likely to perform reliably in preclinical and clinical applications, a process
guided by CRISPR screening 2. CRISPR screening involves systematically testing large numbers of guide RNAs
in cells to measure their editing efficiency, specificity, and functional impact (Figure 1). This high-throughput
screening can be used as a tool to identify gRNA lead candidates in cell and gene therapies and other applications 2.
Considerations for gRNA quality in high-throughput screening
High-throughput screening approaches have accelerated the identification of candidate gRNAs with therapeutic
potential 2. However, despite their scalability and precision, these technologies remain vulnerable to technical
limitations that can compromise data integrity. Issues of sensitivity and reproducibility are significant in largescale
screens, where even minor sample-to-sample variation may produce false positives, reduce overall reliability,
or result in false negatives 3. As the scale of CRISPR screening expands, maintaining sample integrity and
minimizing experimental interference becomes critical for ensuring dependable outcomes.
Mitigating these risks requires the use of high-purity gRNAs. In prioritizing speed and cost reduction, most
commercial suppliers perform only minimal purification during plate production 3. As a result, these plate formats
are prone to variability in yield and/or purity, making them unreliable for generating reproducible results. This
additional variability in an already complex study may result in false positives or cause researchers to overlook
promising gRNAs due to poor purity. To overcome these challenges and maintain data integrity and ensure
dependable outcomes in high-throughput CRISPR screens, it is therefore essential to prioritize high-purity gRNAs.
White paper
Design and
order gRNAs Transfect cells Culture and select Phenotype and
assess results
Figure 1: Overview of a high-throughput screening workflow designed to select candidate gRNAs for downstream validation while excluding
non-functional sequences.
trilinkbiotech.com | 3
Ligation-based workflow for enhanced gRNA manufacturing
To address these challenges, we developed an innovative ligation-based synthesis platform that enhances gRNA
quality for high-throughput screenings in an automated 96 well plate format (Figure 2). Two RNA components are
synthesized separately and then ligated to form the full gRNA. A dedicated cleanup step removes truncated or
remaining fragments, minimizing cross-contamination and reducing well-to-well variability. This new synthesis
and purification platform results in gRNA with higher purity than standard desalting, enabling more reproducible
screens and more accurate lead identification for downstream CRISPR applications (Figure 3). Compared to
desalted gRNA, which shows lower and more variable yields well-to-well, our new ligation-based method delivers
higher yields and more consistent yields of full-length product (Figure 4).
Data
To assess the quality and strength of our innovative workflow, we performed a variety of experiments to assess
the reproducibility and sequence robustness. We initially started by refining our process conditions and comparing
our results to a typical desalted gRNA to assess overall purity (Figure 3). From there, we gradually increased the
total number of sequences produced to perform >200 ligation reactions and assessed both the yield and purity of
the resulting material to ensure the method was scalable for high throughput production (Figure 4 & 5). We have
shown that our method is able to consistently produce gRNAs at purities >80% with reliable yields for uniform
dosing, making our solution fit for custom high-throughput screening.
Figure 3: Comparison of standard desalted gRNA versus ligation-produced gRNA. Both gRNAs are 100-nucleotide SpCas9-matched
sequences analyzed using our standard quality and release assay. Desalt gRNA had a measured purity of 25% while the gRNA produced by
ligation was >70% pure.
Figure 2: Our high-throughput ligation workflow builds full-length gRNA from two RNA components, with a post-ligation cleanup that removes
residuals and truncations for consistently high purity across every well.
Desalt gRNA
Truncations
Truncations
Longmers Longmers
Desired
product
Desired
product
Ligated gRNA
Protospacer sgRNA scaffold Ligated sgRNA
Ligation Clean up
Unligated materials Final full-length sgRNA
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Please note that our discovery services are for research use only. Not for use in diagnostic or therapeutic procedures.
Not for use in humans.
© 2025 TriLink BioTechnologies.
v.09122025
Conclusion
Our ligation-based synthesis platform significantly elevates the quality and reliability of high-throughput screening
workflows. By ensuring high-purity and batch-to-batch consistency of gRNA, it enables robust reproducibility
across experimental replicates and study conditions.
We are actively expanding this technology to support a broader range of genome editing systems, with the goal of
making high-fidelity screening accessible across diverse research applications.
Ready to take your screening workflow to the next level? For more info, visit:
trilinkbiotech.com/screening-gRNAs
Interested in collaborating with us? Let us know: maravai.com/collaborate
References
1. Li, Tianxiang, et al. “CRISPR/Cas9 Therapeutics: Progress and Prospects.” Nature News, Nature Publishing Group, 16 Jan. 2023, www.
nature.com/articles/s41392-023-01309-7.
2. Zhang, Heng, et al. “Deep Sampling of Grna in the Human Genome and Deep-Learning-Informed Prediction of Grna Activities.” Nature
News, Nature Publishing Group, 16 May
3. Zhang, Yuchen, et al. “High-Throughput Screening for Optimizing Adoptive T Cell Therapies
- Experimental Hematology & Oncology.” BioMed Central, BioMed Central, 13 Nov. 2024, ehoonline.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/
s40164-024-00580-w.
SpCas9 (n=96) SaCas9
3
4
2
1
0
Figure 5: Representative yield results for 96-well plate production
of SpCas9 and SaCas9 gRNAs. Average yield values were 2.5 nmol
for SpCas9 and 2.9 nmol for SaCas9. SaCas9. Yield of full-length
product was determined by the following equation:
rYield FLP = ((ODs/ε) • Purity(%)) • 1000
Figure 4: Representative purity results for 96-well plate production
of SpCas9 and SaCas9 gRNAs. Purity was determined using our
standard analytical method and verified by independent review.
Average purity values were >80% for SpCas9 and >65% for SaCas9.
Desalt purity (%FLP) Desalt FLP yield