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Questions abound on synthetic biology: Is it creating ‘new life’ or just part of biotechnology’s toolkit?

Angela Chen, Sophia Roosth | 
[Editor's note: Sophia Roosth, a historian of science at Harvard University, talks about her new book on synthetic biology: Synthetic: How ...
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Glowing trees, no more colonoscopies and other wonders of synthetic biology

David Warmflash | 
Synthetic biology offers the opportunity to create a wide array of novel life forms, products and approaches to medicine -- ...
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GMO plant emerges as drug incubator to fight malaria

Scientists have discovered a gene that allows to double the production of artemisinin in the Artemisia annua plant. The artemisinin-based ...
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Human skin, brain and bone cells grown on plants offer path for tissue implants

David Wahlberg | 
To grow clusters of human stem cells that mimic organs in the lab and might be used someday in tissue ...
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Heart-pounding vegetables? Heart tissue grown on spinach may lead to organ regeneration

Amy Klinkhammer | 
One of the biggest obstacles in the field of organ regeneration is scaling up production from tiny samples in a ...
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Is it time to abandon the 14-day rule limiting human embryo research?

Karen Weintraub | 
[A] group of Harvard University scientists has published a paper arguing that it is time to reconsider the 14-day rule ...
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‘Live vaccines’: Recoding bacteria’s genome could lead to more effective immunizations

Colin Barras | 
[G]eneticists used a new technique to recode 5 per cent of the Salmonella bacterium’s genome, introducing a record number of engineered ...
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Future of milk? Genetically engineered yeast could replace cows

Beth Kowitt | 
The latest new buzzword in food tech? Fermentation. And we’re not talking about the kimchi or kombucha kind. Rather, it’s ...
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DIY DNA: Free online course teaches you how to make your own GMOs

Brendyn Lotz | 
Have you found yourself sitting in your kitchen lately wondering how to make bread, cheese or yogurt? How about genetically ...
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Building synthetic life: Yeast experiments pave way for new drugs, treatments

Bob Holmes | 
The team that built the first synthetic yeast chromosome [in 2014] has now added five more chromosomes, totaling roughly a ...
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‘Speeding up evolution’: Artificial yeast project could boost drug, biofuel production

Emily Mullin | 
An international team of scientists is closing in on its goal of replacing all the genetic material in a yeast ...
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Sickle cell cure? Patient in complete remission following gene therapy

Jamie Wells | 
A number of recent headlines imply a recent case study just published...proves that gene therapy has cured sickle cell disease—a ...
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No egg? No sperm? No problem. First artificial embryo made from stem cells

Kristen Brown | 
Using stem cells in grown-on 3D scaffolding in a laboratory petri dish, scientists have for the first time created an ...
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Body parts from fruit? Skin grafts may use apples to grow human tissue

Dom Galeon | 
Biophysicist Andrew Pelling of University of Ottawa wants to [use apples to determine] the future of biomaterials and human tissue repair.... “What ...
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Return of the woolly mammoth and 3 other ways CRISPR could change the world

Jane Hu | 
The woolly mammoth has been extinct for more than 4000 years. Now scientists are talking about bringing it back with ...
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Human Genome Project 2: Should scientists synthesize entire human genetic code from scratch?

Emma Bryce | 
In May 2016, scientists, lawyers and government representatives converged at Harvard to discuss the Human Genome Project-Write (HGP-Write), a plan ...
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How genetically modified microorganisms could help humans farm on Mars

Julie Leibach | 
[A]s NASA gears up to touch down on Mars, research is turning to how astronauts will produce what they need ...
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Evolving immunity: Controlling obesity, mood with designer gut bacteria faces obstacle

Jade Boyd-Rice | 
Beginning in 2012, scientists discovered they could use CRISPR proteins to precisely edit the genomes of not only bacteria but ...
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Zhang vs. Doudna patent ruling: Broad Institute holds patents but University of California may appeal

Sharon Begley | 
The US patent office ruled [Feb. 15] that hotly disputed patents on the revolutionary genome-editing technology CRISPR-Cas9 belong to the ...
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Proceed with caution: National Academies offers ‘qualified support’ for gene editing ‘abnormal’ embryos

Kristen Hovet | 
The door to gene-edited humans was opened a crack by a joint National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of ...
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Synthetic conservation: Gene drives could revive extinct animals, protect endangered species, knock out pests

Antonio Regalado | 
Scientists working in coördination with a U.S. conservation group say they’ve established an evolution-warping technology called a “gene drive” in ...
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‘Alphabet of life’ expanded by 2 synthetic letters, may help make organisms ‘Earth has never seen’

Yasmin Tayag | 
Until very recently, life on Earth was dictated by strings of just four letters: G, A, T, and C...Deciphering nature’s ...
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For people with congenital hearing loss, gene therapy successful in mice offers promise

Hannah Nichols | 
An improved gene therapy vector restores hearing and balance in genetically deaf mice, according to Boston's Children's Hospital researchers...[T]he mice's ...
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Biodesign: Scientists team with artists to use synthetic biology in making everyday items

Meg Miller | 
Synthetic biology is a rapidly growing market, expected to reach $13.4 billion by 2019. Often called...biodesign, the field is increasingly ...
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Health care, energy, food could be transformed by synthetic biology

Andras Forgacs, David Berry, Ellen Jorgensen | 
[Editor's note: Excerpts are taken from an interview with three experts in the field of synthetic biology: David Berry, general partner ...
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Regrowing heart muscles without cancer risk, using synthetic stem cells

Andrew Thomas | 
A new revolutionary stem cell technique is being used to treat those suffering from damaged muscles without the cancer risk ...
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Recreating nature: Building medicines and materials from ‘unnatural proteins’

Robert Service | 
Over the last several years, with a big assist from the genomics and computer revolutions, David Baker, head of the Institute ...
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