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SpaceX to Mars: Awe-Inspiring Video Shows Vision for Red …
Posted: July 2, 2017 at 8:50 am
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Orphan Black recap: ‘Let the Children and Childbearers Toil’ – EW.com (blog)
Posted: at 8:48 am
Science has always been one of the core components of Orphan Black, but so has power who has it, who loses it, and what those people do to wield or gain it. Now, with P.T. Westmoreland in the picture and Rachel by his side, were seeing more of those inner workings than ever before. Were also getting revelations about those early attempts to push the boundaries of human evolution yep, that thing in the woods was an experiment gone awry and the splintering effect it had on the top of the Neolution pyramid.
So while Ss plans uncovered a wealth of information (and a familiar face or two), Kira also did some experimenting of her own in hopes of learning more about her special abilities. In honor of these revelations, this week well run the clones through our trusted Orphan Black Clone Status Hyper-Sequence Generator Calcutron and export them by whos discovered the most this week. Please enjoy the data set below. (#Science!)
Sarah Much to Sarahs displeasure, Kira wont tell her much about her meetings with Rachel but Sarah does uncover a nasty cut on Kiras arm, which she thinks Rachel inflicted until her daughter admits she did it herself to see how fast she could heal. Unable to provide the answers she seeks and with three days until she has to go back to Dyad, S asks Felix to take Kira while she takes Sarah on a recon mission she has a lead that may help them get some leverage.
Their mark is a Dr. Elizabeth Perkins, who, S tells Sarah, could have a key to P.T. Westmoreland but they need her wallet. Ss intel (the woman likes to drink and has a rough relationship with her own daughter) gives them the perfect setup: They stage a fight, and Sarah throws a drink at S and grabs Dr. Perkins wallet as Perkins makes sure S is all right and then invites her to sit down for another drink.Turns out, Dr. Perkins is a psychologist studying, in her words, how PTSD co-occurs with major depressive disorders, and shes in town for some case studies. One person shes supposed to meet is an Alex Ripley, who is supposedly a high-level Neolution defector who may be being held against her will at a nearby mental health facility. S and Sarah are going to go in as Dr. Perkins and her assistant to check it out. (Sarah, meanwhile, realizes theres no way Ss usual methods would have known about the Neo. She wont say where her intel came from, but Im pretty sure we already know remember when Delphine stopped by her door?)
Once the bespectacled Mrs. S and Sarah-posing-as-a-bumbling-assistant con their way into visitors passes, they sneak into an unauthorized ward and find Alex Ripley, who is actually (drumroll please) season 3 baddie Virginia Coady. Oh hey, blast from the Orphan Black past!Shes initially very drugged up and unable to speak, but Sarah still calls her a genocidal bitch by way of greeting and gives her a slap across the face courtesy of Helena once she comes to. Virginias surprised when they ask about P.T., but after S hints they may be able to help her escape if she talks, she says an old friend had her locked away someone who shared her goal of controlling human genetics but didnt always get it right.
RELATED VIDEO: Orphan Black cast teases season 5
That old friend, it turns out, is Susan Duncan, and here we get a wealth of backstory on their early attempts at Neolution-inspired human experimentation. Susan and P.T. recruited Virginia to their cause when she was young, and before they found Kendall Malone or started human cloning projects, someone else was their first human subject. He was P.T. Westmorelands original obsession, but too many mistakes were made on this child who possessed a unique genome. Their science wasnt as refined then, and he began growing tumors and suffering brain damage Susan wanted to stop their experiments, but Virginia disagreed, and, in her words, they created a monster. Susan never forgave her for it, and they split assets in the friend/science divorce: Virginia took Castor, Susan kept Leda, and P.T. kept them apart.
But before she can tell them anything more, the doctor whom the real Elizabeth Perkins had supposedly been there to visit interrupts the intel party. Seeking a means of escape and knowing shell soon be drugged into submission again, Virginia attacks Sarah and steals her visitors pass (which contains a key card), and when the orderlies and doctor restrain her, S and Sarah use the commotion as a means to sneak away. This definitely doesnt seem like the last well see of her.
Cosima They dont explicitly say it, but its pretty obvious the thing Sarah glimpsed in the woods during her little vacation on Evil Mystery Island is the now-grown boy from Susan Duncan, Virginia Coady, and P.T. Westmorelands early days of human experiments and via Cosima, we get out first real (albeit brief) glimpse of him.
After Charlotte and Aisha hear him and spot whats presumably one of his teeth in the woods while going to look for a missing pig from the Revival menagerie, Cosima confronts Mud asking for answers. She already suspects that whatever took a bite out of Daisy the Pig has something to do with Westmoreland. Were on the Island of Doctor Moreau here, she says. Whatever weird s is happening, its coming from the big house. All Mud will say is its not his fault(probably talking about the man in the woods, but possibly Westmoreland), and she warns Cosima to stay out of the woods.
Later that night, Cosima follows Mud as she makes her way in the dark up toward Westmorelands house. Inside, P.T. is hooked up to some sort of IV treatment (is that a dialysis machine? Science people, drop some knowledge in the comments if you know!), and Cosimas snooping brings her down into the basement, where she finds not just old medical equipment but photos of painful-looking experiments/procedures and, more disconcertingly, a cell with chains and blood on the walls. When Mud finds her down there, Cosima demands to know what they did to the man in the woods, but Mud just begs her to get out and frantically sends her out a side door. Still not deterred, Cosima stays close enough to the house to see Mud bring a blanket out to the man and try to talk to him, but he only appears for long enough to growl and bare his teeth before taking her gift and running back into the shadows. (Recap continues on page 2)
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Orphan Black recap: 'Let the Children and Childbearers Toil' - EW.com (blog)
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Children’s Hospital researcher taps into creative side by writing science fiction – The Columbus Dispatch
Posted: at 8:48 am
Eric Lagatta The Columbus Dispatch @EricLagatta
In Dan Koboldt's fantasy novels, a medieval world of sorcery converges with its modern technological counterpart.
The metaphor is as apt as any for Koboldt's dual persona: He is both scientist and fantasy novelist.
The 37-year-old spends his weekdays at Nationwide Children's Hospital researching rare diseases in kids.At night and on weekends, he travels to Alissia, a mythical universe of his own making.
Its definitely a very different part of the brain than what I use at work, said Koboldt, who lives in Lewis Center with his wife, Christina, and their three young children. I like it as a creative outlet, and its a fun hobby to have thats less serious sometimes than the stuff I do at the hospital.
In his hometown of St. Louis, Koboldt grew up on a diet of J.R.R. Tolkien, Frank Herbert and other stalwarts of the genre. "Lord of the Rings" and even the original "Star Wars" films gave him an appreciation for the trilogy format.
For years, though, he suppressed his drive to write his own epic tales as he pursued another passion: human genetic research.
Although Koboldt took evening writing classes at Washington University in St. Louis while working on his master's in biology, he didn't really begin writing in earnestuntil 2009, when he firstparticipated in theinternet-based National Novel Writing Month.
"That book will never see the light of day," he said, "but it's good exercise for me."
He continued writing while working as a researcher at the Genome Institute of Washington University, eventually creating an idea for a trilogy in 2013 that he thought had enough promise to begin shopping it to agents.
By early August in 2015, he had a deal with HarperCollins, which agreed to print the "Gateways to Alissia" series under its Voyager Impulse imprint.
Koboldt's first book, "The Rogue Retrieval," was published in March 2016. The storyfollows Las Vegas magician Quinn Bradley, who is recruited by a corporation to infiltrate a medieval realm through a secret portal.
Bradley finds himself returning to Alissia in "The Island Deception," which was released in April. This time, the protagonistsees an opportunity to learn to use real magic for himself.
The stakes will be even higher in the finale, The World Awakening, as competing interests become aware of the portals existence and fight to control the alternate dimension.
"What I like about Dan's writing is that he's able to make Quinn really funny," Koboldt's agent,Paul Stevens ofDonald Maass Literary Agency, said by email."Even though he (the character) is in life-or-death situations, he keeps his sense of humor, often throwing in pop-culture references to lighten the moment."
Like any effective work of science fiction or fantasy, the books draw on the familiar to explore social issues. Themes of corporate exploitation abound, reflected in the shady CASE Global that engages in espionage and uses military drones for its own profit.
The inspiration for the series came after Koboldt read an article about people secretly filming magicians Penn and Teller's live acts in order to reverse engineer their illusions so they could steal them.
It got me thinking about technology, he said. Technology has really changed the practice of illusions and magic.
Since he moved with his familyfrom St. Louis to Columbus in the fall to work at Children's, he has discovered what he called a lively and passionate literary community in central Ohio. He has appeared at several eventsto help build an area fan base, with his next appearance scheduled Sunday at the Book Loft in German Village.
Koboldt and others working at Washington University were recruited to Children's last fall as part of the hospital's efforts to advance pediatric research. As a researcher atthe Institute for Genomic Medicine, Koboldt helps determine genetic mutations that can cause unidentifieddiseasesin children.
His role is primarily as a data analyst.
What I really enjoy is the people who work here are all fantastic, Koboldt said. Were much closer to the patients and families were trying to help.
In his office, a poster featuring the cover of"The Rogue Retrieval" hangs prominently. On his desk, a coffee mug warns all visitors:"Careful, or you'll end up in my book."
"I like to break it out at meetings because everyone around here is afraid they'll end up in the book," he said with a laugh.
It's not an idle threat, as co-worker Vince Magrini has learned.
Magrini whohas knownKoboldt for 10 years, since the two began working togetherat Washington University is quick to point out that a military contractor named "Hank the Tank" Magrini was killed in the early pages of the first book.
He vowed not to read another page until Koboldt resurrects the character.
It's not that Im really boycotting him," said Magrini, who began working at Children's at the same time as Koboldt, "but Im boycotting him.
Joking aside, Magrini praised his colleagues ability to embrace a creative side that many dont associate with scientists.
It helps really diversify somebody," he said. "It centers them; it gives them balance."
Peter White, senior director of the computational genomics group, recognized that same trait in Koboldt, too.
It doesnt fit the stereotype of having this computer science/math/genetics background and to have that creative, artistic side to able to write a novel, said White, adding that Koboldt's books are "on my list to read because I do enjoy fantasy.
Christina Koboldt, who met her husband of 11 years when both were undergraduates at the University of Missouri, was never surprised by his artistic drive.
He often carries a notepad to jot down ideas that occur to him. And,as soon as they put their children to bed, he retreats to his home office to write.
Hes got the creative juice and the imagination and the skill to do it, Christina Koboldt said. I just think its incredible that he can do that while still managing his job and his family and his marriage.
Once Gateways concludes, Koboldt envisions more fantasy adventures.
He hinted at a series set in the future that draws more on the experiences of his day job in which a company designs genetically engineered dragons for households to own.
@EricLagatta
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The race to revive woolly mammoths using ancient DNA – CBS News – CBS News
Posted: at 8:48 am
Like "Jurassic Park," what if you could use the science of DNA to resurrect long-extinct creatures that once roamed the earth?
Efforts to do that are actually underway.
Led by Dr. George Church "the Einstein of our times," according to author Ben Mezrich a lab at Harvard Medical School is working on bringing back the woolly mammoth through genetic engineering.
The process is detailed in Mezrich's new book, "Woolly: The True Story of the Quest to Revive One of History's Most Iconic Extinct Creatures," published by Atria Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster which is a division of CBS. It's also being made into a movie.
"The woolly mammoths are coming up out of the ice. So the permafrost that is slowly getting warmer, these bodies are coming out and they're taking the genetic material and then they are synthesizing it and they're placing [it] into the cells of an Asian elephant so that an Asian elephant gives birth to a woolly mammoth," Mezrich said on "CBS This Morning: Saturday." "So essentially, you're recreating the mammoth using its relative that still exists today."
Mezrich likened the permafrost to "the ring of the world."
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"It's like a ticking time bomb. It contains within it more carbon than if we burned all the forests on Earth three times," Mezrich said. "And these Russian scientists, the Zimovs, have shown since the 80s that if you repopulate it with herbivores from the Pleistocene era -- and they're using tanks to mimic woolly mammoths and they're putting bison there -- they've managed to lower the temperature of the tundra by 15 degrees. So the goal is to put a herd of woolly mammoths in Siberian tundra to keep the permafrost from melting."
Mezrich said the woolly mammoths will help the world in an out-of-the-box way.
"I mean, elephants don't get cancer, which is very strange. Elephants have thousands and thousands of more cells than us. And why they don't get cancer is in their genes. If we can figure that out, we can use this genetic engineering to solve cancer," he said.
The author also addressed the ethical concerns related to these types of genetic engineering practices.
"The idea of playing God, the idea of making a mistake, of letting something out of the lab, these things come up. And that's why you need responsible scientists. Dr. George Church is an incredibly good person and you need people like that doing this because this box is open. The Pandora's box of this technology is here," Mezrich said. "There are labs all over the world not just making woolly mammoths but doing things that 10 years from now are going to have huge repercussions. So we want responsible scientists doing this."
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DNA test could alter man’s life sentence – Grand Junction Daily Sentinel
Posted: at 8:48 am
By Gabrielle Porter Saturday, July 1, 2017
New DNA testing is underway in a decades-old murder case after post-conviction lawyers for Verle James Mangum won the right to re-examine evidence used at his 2003 murder trial.
Mangum was convicted at trial of bludgeoning to death Clifton resident Janet Davis, 42, and her 11-year-old daughter, Jennifer, in 1996. He was 17 at the time of the murder and was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
Garfield County District Judge James Boyd ruled in November to order new testing after a series of arguments from defense attorneys Erin Wilson of Steamboat Springs and Kathleen McGuire of Denver. Prosecutors opposed the move.
We resisted (new testing), and in large part we did that because the conviction itself really wasnt based on DNA, said Chief Deputy District Attorney David Waite, adding that Mangums conviction was based on his own confession to two friends.
Wilson and McGuire wrote in motions filed with Boyd that Mangums confession was unreliable.
The statements made by Mr. Mangum were and are wholly unreliable given their content and the circumstances surrounding Mr. Mangums development and life experiences at the time the statements were made. Yet nothing related to Mr. Mangums development or life circumstances was ever investigated by his trial counsel or presented to the jury, the motion said. ... Expert testimony can and would explain how a young person could do what is almost unthinkable in the mind of an adult falsely confess to committing two murders (to friends).
Wilson and McGuire also argued that new and better technology is now available to test and retest certain pieces of evidence, and that Mangums trial lawyers mistakenly believed his DNA had been found on a comforter in Davis home.
Waite said that Boyd ultimately, I think in an abundance of caution, granted their motion for post-conviction DNA testing.
Wilson and McGuire declined to speak publicly about the case.
The newly ordered DNA testing is only the latest chapter in Mangums long and labyrinthine case.
Davis and her daughter Jennifer were found dead in their Clifton home on Feb. 15, 1996. Prosecutors initially filed murder charges against Davis husband, Jennifers father, which they dropped in 1997.
Mangum was arrested only after confessing to the crime. Despite the confession, he pleaded not guilty and was convicted by a jury in 2003.
Prosecutors asserted at trial that Mangum killed Davis after she caught him having sex with her young daughter while high on methamphetamine. He killed Jennifer as a witness, they said.
He was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.
In the years after Mangums conviction, Colorado lawmakers took steps to prevent life sentences for juveniles with the passage of a 2006 law. The law also established that juveniles convicted of murder must be considered for parole after serving 40 years in prison; however, it was not made retroactive after family members of victims raised concerns, so Mangum was not considered for re-sentencing.
The Colorado Court of Appeals in 2007 affirmed Mangums Mesa County trial convictions.
In 2012, the U.S. Supreme Court decided life sentences without the possibility for parole were unconstitutional for juveniles, even in cases where the juvenile is convicted as an adult.
In 2016, the high court added to that ruling, deciding that it should be applied to inmates who were sentenced before the 2012 decision, effectively tossing Mangums life sentence.
Wilson and McGuire wrote in motions that the re-sentencing issue is on hold until the DNA testing is complete.
Also still pending is a motion Mangum has made asserting that his attorneys including Richard Gurley, now a Mesa County district judge provided ineffective counsel during his first trial. Mangums case has been moved to Garfield County.
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New Natural Selection: How Scientists Are Altering DNA to … – Newsweek
Posted: at 8:48 am
Newsweek | New Natural Selection: How Scientists Are Altering DNA to ... Newsweek Scientists are altering our genetic code and engineering new forms of material that improve nature, from flowers that can detect bombs to bacteria that secretes ... |
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Young mum praises 4 miracle moisturiser for ‘curing’ her little girl’s … – Mirror.co.uk
Posted: at 8:45 am
A three-year-old girl who has been plagued with painful eczema since birth has been cured by a 3.99 Boots moisturiser, her mother has claimed.
Evie-Rae's eczema left her bleeding, scratching and unable to sleep, the Nottingham Post reports .
Mother, Paige Sweeney, 23, from Strelley, Nottingham was desperate for a cure and took her little girl for countless appointments with a dermatologist, who prescribed the toddler antibiotics and steroid cream.
However despite attending appointments every eight weeks and trying a range of different medications, Evie-Rae's skin still flared up in painful rashes around her mouth, on her hands and in the creases at the back of her knees.
Paige decided to buy a 3.99 bottle of Child's Farm baby moisturiser from Boots while out shopping and within a week her daughter's skin had cleared up.
She said: "I've tried everything in an attempt to help Evie-Rae. She has had eczema since she was born, then when she was five weeks old she was diagnosed with a milk allergy.
"Her eczema was so painful that she didn't sleep through the night until she was two. She was constantly scratching and bleeding.
"We saw a dermatologist every eight weeks for two-and-a-half years, but nothing we tried seemed to work. It was awful to see her in so much pain."
She continued: "I saw the moisturising cream on the shelf in Boots and decided to give it a go. Evie-Rae also has a nut, soya and egg allergy, so we have to be careful with what we give her.
"Within a matter of days I could see her skin starting to clear up. I couldn't believe it. The NHS could save a fortune if they put it on prescription."
The unexpected reaction prompted Paige to post on Facebook - and the before and after images ended up being shared more than 40,000 times.
As a result, Childs Farm's founder Joanna Jensen, who launched the company in 2010 due to her own daughters' fine hair and sensitive skin, got in touch and paid Paige and Evie-Rae a visit.
Joanna said: "Paige and Evie-Rae's story is not uncommon to us - but they have shown how one small change can make all the difference.
"Since Paige shared her pictures on Facebook, the moisturiser sales have skyrocketed, flying off the shelves at the rate of one bottle per minute.
"I was delighted to meet Paige, her sister and Evie-Rae - it was the least I could do to thank them personally for sharing their experience with other parents, and doing wonders for our business.
"We are a small, rural business in Hampshire, competing in a space dominated by Global Pharmaceutical companies.
"We are constantly overwhelmed by the love and support we get for our brand from parents and their children - and all because I wanted to make bath time more fun and less itchy for my own girls."
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Why does your dog hate Fourth of July fireworks? It’s genetic – The Missoulian
Posted: at 8:44 am
At Jacobs Island Dog Park on Wednesday afternoon, Laura Tonnessen threw a stick into the river for her dog Thor. He barked enthusiastically, retrieving and dropping the stick at her feet. But in a few days, on the Fourth of July, Tonnessen knows Thors demeanor will change. The loud fireworks frighten him.
Hell hide behind furniture and act weird and whine, Tonnessen said.
Last year, Tonnessens friends pitbull, Cracker, ran away and was lost for three days because he was spooked by loud fireworks. It was traumatic to lose him for so long, Tonnessen said, and she makes sure to keep Thor inside on the holiday to prevent him from running away, too.
Michael Edwards, a student at the University of Montana, said his 130-pound great Pyrenees, Snowy, climbs into the bathtub, pulls the shower curtain closed with her mouth, and howls until the thunder storm or fireworks end.
If shes outside, she runs. They once found her about seven miles from their house, trying to escape the source of the noise. Animal shelters report that July 4-5 are their busiest days of the year.
When dogs bark, flee or cower on the Fourth of July, they are exhibiting symptoms of a panic disorder called noise phobia.
Fireworks and other loud noises terrify a fraction of all dogs, and their reactions sometimes endanger their health. Dogs may jump through windows, climb fences or run away for days to try to escape the sounds of patriotic celebration.
This phobia, which is a symptom of underlying anxiety issues, has recently been linked to a certain gene in dogs, says Dr. Leticia Fanucchi, a veterinary behaviorist at Washington State University's College of Veterinary Medicine.
Some dogs are more genetically predisposed to anxiety disorders, Fanucchi said, just like humans.
The area that is activated in our brain for fear is the amygdala, and the amygdala can be triggered long before the prefrontal cortex can process information, Fanucchi said.
Its like people who suffer from arachnophobia even if you explain that the spider won't hurt them, it activates the amygdala and makes them panic.
The amygdala is where irrational fears trigger a fight, flight or freeze response, while the prefrontal cortex controls reason and rational decision-making. Dogs panic at the sound of fireworks because they think their lives are at risk, even if they are safe at home.
Fanucchi said not all breeds of dogs carry this anxiety gene, and some are more prone to it than others. Within one breed, a dog could have the anxiety gene while another might not. This explains why some dogs dont react at all to loud noises. Those that do are typically anxious about other things, as well.
What we do know is that a good chunk of the dogs that have noise phobia do have generalized anxiety as an underlying disease, Fanucchi said. About 40 percent of the dogs that have generalized anxiety have noise phobia. So noise phobia is a big red flag that something else is going on with that dog, and it needs to be diagnosed and treated appropriately.
For this Fourth of July, its too late to start a long-term medication regimen to treat anxiety because medications typically take a few weeks to become effective, Fanucchi said. But there are other, short-term practices that can minimize dogs anxiety and keep them safe.
Creating a quiet and distracting setting for dogs can help them stay calm, said Emily Adamson, director of Organizational Advancement at the Humane Society of Western Montana. Scent therapy, like lavender spray, is popular for calming dogs, Adamson said.
Food toys and soft music (they play classical at the shelter) help distract the dogs from the source of their fear. For people who do take their dogs outside, Adamson recommends double-checking their ID tags to make sure the information is current, in case the dogs run away.
And then, theres the Thundershirt.
Dr. Lindsey Rewinkel at Pruyn Veterinary Hospital in Missoula said Thundershirts are available at pet stores and some veterinary hospitals, and serve as a dog anxiety vest.
Its a heavy fabric fashioned into a shirt that you wrap them in, Rewinkel said. Its not quite as severe as a swaddle, but the goal is to make them feel comforted. That has helped an incredible amount of dogs cope with noise phobias if they're not as severe.
Finally, there are medications vets can prescribe that sedate dogs and minimize their anxiety symptoms on the Fourth of July if none of these other practices work. Rewinkel said she always urges people to also treat the underlying anxiety issue with long-term behavioral therapy, and not just resort to medication, which can serve as a Band-Aid solution to a larger problem.
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Why does your dog hate Fourth of July fireworks? It's genetic - The Missoulian
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Gene editing tool could cure disease, or aid bioterrorism – The Daily Herald
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By Jerry Coyne, The Washington Post
Some of the greatest benefactors of our species are not the recognized do-gooders but those paid to satisfy their curiosity: the scientists. Such pure and unsullied inquiry has yielded thousands of valuable byproducts, including antibiotics, vaccinations, X-rays and insulin therapy.
Jennifer Doudna and Samuel Sternbergs book A Crack in Creation describes another fortuitous discovery, a method that promises to revolutionize biotechnology by allowing us to change nearly any gene in any way in any species. The method is called CRISPR, pronounced like the useless compartment in your fridge. In terms of scientific impact, CRISPR is right up there beside the double helix (1953); the ability, developed in the 1970s, to determine the sequence of DNA segments; and the polymerase chain reaction, a 1980s invention that allows us to amplify specified sections of DNA. All three achievements were recognized with Nobel Prizes. CRISPR developed largely by Doudna and her French colleague Emmanuelle Charpentier also has a strong whiff of Nobel about it, for its medical and practical implications are immense.
The story of CRISPR is told with refreshing first-person directness in this book. (Sternberg was Doudnas student, but the book uses Doudnas voice.) It is not often in science writing that the actual discoverer puts pen to paper rather, the story is usually told by a science writer or colleague so this insider account is especially engaging.
CRISPR, an acronym for clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats, is a way to edit DNA. With CRISPR, we can change a sequence from ATTGGCG to ATTGGGG or to CCCCCCC, or to anything else. There are other recently developed ways to do this, but they are uniformly unwieldy, time-consuming and inefficient. The joy of CRISPR is that it allows us to edit genes painlessly: It is easily applied and seems to work well in whatever species or cell type we choose.
The history of CRISPR is a prime example of the unexpected benefits of pure research, for it began with a handful of curious scientists not intent on changing the world. In the late 1980s, scientists observed a bizarre section of DNA in some bacteria, consisting of short, identical and repeated palindromic sequences that read the same way backward and forward (e.g., CATGTTGTAC). The repeated palindromes were separated by 20-letter segments of unique DNA, segments eventually found to come from viruses that infect bacteria. People soon realized that the CRISPR region was the bacteriums immune system against dangerous viruses.
CRISPR helps bacteria remember previous viral attacks and thus prepares them for future attacks by the same virus. This is analogous to our immune system, which also remembers intruders: If you have had measles once, you wont get it again because the first exposure preps the immune system for subsequent exposures. The way bacteria do this is by storing a segment of the viruss DNA from the first attack. When the same kind of virus strikes again, the bacterium recognizes that the alien DNA segment has reappeared by matching the stored segment to the intruder DNA. Having identified the intruder as a bad guy, the bacterium can snip up, i.e. destroy, the intruders DNA, guided by the same stored DNA/intruder DNA match.
Doudna and Charpentier realized that it was possible to subvert the CRISPR system: Instead of viral intruder DNA, we can use the DNA sequence were interested in (say, one causing a genetic disease), with the result that CRISPR snips up any and all DNA molecules with the target sequence. Once DNA is snipped up, there are ways to repair it using a different sequence, including a version of the gene that does not produce disease. Presto: gene editing and a path to designer genes.
Rewriting genes has the potential to cure many genetic illnesses. People suffering from sickle-cell disease, for instance, have just a single mutated letter in the DNA coding for their hemoglobin. It shouldnt be hard for CRISPR to replace that letter in embryos or bone marrow, curing the millions who suffer from this devastating malady.
But thats just one of myriad possible edits. CRISPR can in principle cure any disease caused by one or a few mutations: not just sickle-cell but Huntingtons disease, cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy or color blindness. We could cure AIDS patients by editing out the HIV viruses that hide in their DNA. By editing early embryos, we could reduce the incidence of genetically influenced diseases such as Alzheimers and some types of breast cancer. We could make cosmetic changes in our children, altering their hair and eye color or even, in principle, their height, weight, body shape and intelligence. None of this has been tried in people, but since CRISPR works well in human cell cultures, it seems just a matter of time.
Turning to other species, we could genetically engineer either pigs or people so we could transplant pig organs into humans without activating our immune response. Weve used CRISPR to make virus-resistant farm animals, and we can now engineer insecticide-making genes into the DNA of crops, eliminating the need for dangerous sprays. As the book title implies, CRISPR allows us to bypass or undo evolution without relying on the hit-or-miss methods of selective breeding.
But of course DNA editing also raises ethical issues, and these occupy the final quarter of the book. Doudna worries about the return of Nazi-style eugenics and even had a dream about Hitler asking her for CRISPR technology. Should we engage only in somatic gene editing: changing genes in affected tissues where they cant be passed on to the next generation? Or should we also do germline editing, changing early embryos in a way that could be transmitted to future generations? While that conjures up the bad old days of eugenics, it is in fact the only way to repair most disease genes. But if we do that, should we stick to fixing genes that would debilitate the offspring, as with sickle-cell disease, or should we also change genes that merely raise the possibility of illness: those that could produce high cholesterol or heart disease?
Things get even more slippery. Should we edit the embryos of deaf parents to produce deaf offspring, so that their children can participate in deaf culture? And the ultimate taboo genetic enhancement: Should we give our children a leg up in looks or intelligence? That, after all, will provide genetic advantages only to those who can afford the technology.
Finally, how do we keep the technology out of the hands of bioterrorists? Cheap and simple CRISPR kits are now sold on the internet, allowing anyone to edit the genes of bacteria. The nightmarish prospect of engineered diseases looms. While its good to consider all these questions before the technology is widely available, Doudna and Sternberg come to few conclusions, and their extended vacillating is the books sole flaw.
Alongside the ethical quandaries come commercial ones. There is a great deal of money to be made through the licensing of CRISPR technology. We have already seen a protracted patent battle between Doudnas employer, the University of California, and Harvard/MITs Broad Institute, home to Feng Zhang, who was largely responsible for converting CRISPR from a device for editing bacterial genes into a lab-friendly tool that works in human cells. There is a lot at stake.
And this brings us an issue conspicuously missing from the book. Much of the research on CRISPR, including Doudnas and Zhangs, was funded by the federal government the American taxpayer. Yet both scientists have started biotechnology companies that have the potential to make them and their universities fabulously wealthy from licensing CRISPR for use in medicine and beyond. So if we value ethics, transparency and the democratization of CRISPR technology, as do Doudna and Sternberg, let us also consider the ethics of scientists enriching themselves on the taxpayers dime. The fight over patents and credit impedes the free exchange among scientists that promotes progress, and companies created from taxpayer-funded research make us pay twice to use their products.
Finally, let us remember that it was not so long ago that university scientists refused to enrich themselves in this way, freely giving discoveries such as X-rays, the polio vaccine and the Internet to the public. The satisfaction of scientific curiosity should be its primary reward.
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Gene editing tool could cure disease, or aid bioterrorism - The Daily Herald
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July 4: In defense of food that’s politically incorrect | The Sacramento … – Sacramento Bee
Posted: at 8:44 am
Sacramento Bee | July 4: In defense of food that's politically incorrect | The Sacramento ... Sacramento Bee As edible patriotism, hot dogs, burgers, corn on the cob and strawberry shortcake should be non-partisan traditions on the Fourth of July. Unfortunately, this ... |
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July 4: In defense of food that's politically incorrect | The Sacramento ... - Sacramento Bee
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