brassica

CRISPR could efficiently improve difficult-to-breed oilseed crops, study shows

Hong Yang et al. | 
CRISPR/Cas9 is a valuable tool for both basic and applied research that has been widely applied to different plant species ...
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Billionaire Randal Kirk behind GMO salmon, apples and mosquitoes

Jessica Glenza | 
The world’s first genetically modified fish farm is a subsidiary of Intrexon, a $2.2bn company headed by Randal Kirk, a ...
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Crippling costs blunt potential of drugs harvested from living cells

Ian Haydon | 
Biologics are drugs grown in living cells, rather than produced through chemical reactions. They can be incredibly effective, but are ...
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Human gene-editing debate: ‘We all need to educate ourselves’

Charles Sackerson | 
[Editor's note: Charles Sackerson is a biology lecturer at California State University Channel Islands.] In 1973, biotechnologist Herbert Boyer and ...
TECH TRENDS x e

Lesson for gene editing: How do we regulate a technology when we ‘can’t imagine’ the consequences of its use?

Mark Buchanan | 
Humanity has a method for trying to prevent new technologies from getting out of hand: explore the possible negative consequences, ...
feature

Use of embryo selection in China is soaring: Is that a good thing?

David Cyranoski | 
Early experiments are beginning to show how genome-editing technologies such as CRISPR might one day fix disease-causing mutations before embryos are implanted ...
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Americans shedding their skepticism of human genome editing

Jon Cohen | 
Earlier surveys of Americans (here and here) have found a reluctance to support human genome editing...But the new survey, conducted by social ...
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First bioengineered ‘mutant ants’ could open research doors

Ben Guarino | 
Despite what you might've seen in 1950s monster movies, it's difficult to raise mutant ants. For years biologists have altered the ...
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It’s time to talk about the ethics of CRISPR-edited human embryos

Jessica Berg | 
With groundbreaking human gene editing research moving forward, and human enhancement becoming a reality, decisions need to be made about ...
archie rolland

RNA editing could help slow progression of symptoms of ALS and Huntington’s

Joe Fingas | 
The most common gene editing technique, CRISPR-Cas9, only modifies DNA. That's helpful in most cases, but it means that you can't ...
Genes

Mining the ‘dark genome’ for genetic mutations behind mystery diseases

When doctors can’t find a diagnosis for a patient’s disease, they turn to genetic detectives. Equipped with genomic sequencing technologies ...
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Micro RNA: Genetic suppression might control insect-borne diseases and limit pesticide use

Richard Levine | 
New methods of controlling mosquitos without chemicals include releasing sterile males, spreading confusing pheromones and, most recently, disrupting egg development ...
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Hacking frontier? Corrupted DNA used to seize control of computer

Antonio Regalado | 
In what appears to be the first successful hack of a software program using DNA, researchers say malware they incorporated ...
iStock Medium

Alzheimer’s memory loss may be reversible, after all

Olivia Petter | 
Symptoms of Alzheimer’s affecting patient’s memories could be reversed, new research from MIT indicates. It might be possible to break down the ...
coral

‘Super genes’ protect Arabian Gulf coral reefs from warmer waters — for now

Rising sea temperatures are a main cause of global coral reef bleaching — when the water is too warm, corals ...
medicine

Finding the right antidepressant could be easier with genetic test

Shamard Charles | 
The burgeoning field of pharmacogenomics — how genes affect a person's response to drugs — is helping more patients avoid ...
baby

Viewpoint: Don’t expect the first CRISPR baby to be born in the US

Jim Kozubek | 
The media well and truly pricked up its collective ears when US geneticist Shoukhrat Mitalipov last month showed that he ...
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Could gene editing have saved Charlie Gard?

Ricki Lewis | 
The British infant died of a mitochondrial disease as news broke that US scientists had successfully edited a human embryo ...
p m x

‘Three-parent’ children? FDA admonishes fertility company, blocks procedure

Ariana Cha | 
On [August 4], regulators issued a sternly worded letter to fertility doctor John Zhang, who helped a mother with a genetic disorder give ...
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11 things CRISPR gene editing has helped us achieve this year

Brad Bergan | 
The CRISPR//Cas9 gene editing tool has quickly earned a reputation as a revolutionary technology, and its merits support the clout ...
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Harvard’s George Church: CRISPR could give us pig-to-human organ transplants within 2 years

Gina Kolata | 
In a bold scientific step that helps open the door to organ transplants from animals, researchers at Harvard and a ...
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Genome destruction: CRISPR used to remove entire Y chromosome in mice

Kerry Grens | 
Researchers have managed to wipe out an entire mouse chromosome using CRISPR-Cas9. They aimed numerous double-strand breaks at either the ...
PGD

Why use gene editing on human embryos when other options are available?

Josh Baxt | 
Researchers in the U.S. and South Korea have shown that gene editing can correct a genetic disorder in an embryo. Using CRISPR-Cas9, ...
Unknown

Human germline editing ethics proposal: ‘No human pregnancy’

Jennie Dusheck, Kelly Ormond | 
A team of genetics experts has issued a policy statement recommending that research on editing human genes in eggs, sperm and early ...
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We each have 3 billion base pairs in our genome. Artificial intelligence can help us sort it out.

Nick Stockton | 
Genes carry the information that make you you. So it's fitting that, when sequenced and stored in a computer, your ...
dn e

Some Catholic ethicists decry human embryo gene editing as ‘immoral’

Adelaide Mena | 
Researchers in Oregon have announced that they have successfully altered genes in a human embryo for the first time in ...
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How to prevent a ‘mistake’ with release of gene-edited mosquitoes? On-off switches

So, you’ve genetically engineered a malaria-resistant mosquito, now what? How many mosquitos would you need to replace the disease-carrying wild ...
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