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Gene Editing
From global DNA screening standards to safeguards for benchtop synthesizers and AI tools, a new biosecurity playbook is taking shape.
21mins
"By keeping people biologically younger, we can enjoy a longer health span, a longer period of healthy life where we're active, where we're happy, where we can engage in our hobbies, and play with our grandkids and great grandkids."
15mins
“Until very recently, I thought I would die with the same genome that I was born with.”
Tech expert Peter Leyden argues that we have a historic opportunity to harness AI and other transformative technologies in order to make a much better world over the next 25 years.
EBT-101 is not the only candidate for an HIV cure. Stem cell transplants, medications, and other CRISPR therapies are being researched.
"They decreased their drinking to the point that it was so low we didn’t record a blood-alcohol level."
4mins
Forget AI. Gene editing is still our most powerful — and dangerous — technology.
An innovation's value is found between the technophile’s promises and the Luddite’s doomsday scenarios.
Once activated, the CRISPR-Cas12a2 system goes on a rampage, chopping up DNA and RNA indiscriminately, causing cell death.
The new documentary “Make People Better” leans toward a different narrative about gene-editing than we've heard before.
It was a particularly good year for biotech and medical technology. There were also notable advances in energy.
This small phase 1 study suggests that CRISPR-engineered T cells are safe and potentially effective, but there is a long way to go.
5mins
CRISPR’s gene drive can defy evolution. Here’s how, explained by Nobel Prize winner Jennifer Doudna.
John Templeton Foundation
An interview with CRISPR co-discoverer and Nobel Prize-winner Dr. Jennifer Doudna.
John Templeton Foundation
For 40 years, scientists thought a specific gene was linked to aggression in hamsters. Removing it, however, had violent consequences.