Rotten tomatoes no more: growing sweeter tomatoes is possible by editing just two of the fruit’s genes. Deleting the genes ...
Today’s mass-produced tomatoes often grow to palm-sized proportions, but their naturally occurring ancestors were far smaller ...
The world produces around 180 million tons of tomatoes each year. Whether they are raw, cooked, or used in sauces, tomatoes ...
Life Sciences Center (LSC) have discovered a unique way for cells to silence specific genes without cutting DNA. This ...
A patient's immune cells can be specifically reprogrammed to fight cancer more effectively. Researchers in the ...
NTLA-2002 is an in vivo gene-editing therapy that is based on clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR)–CRISPR-associated protein 9. NTLA-2002 targets the gene encoding ...
the latest shift for a tarantella company that has repeatedly switched direction and leadership since first emerging as one of the first CRISPR biotechs a decade ago. Editas will now focus ...
Heritable human genome editing has long been hotly contested, in large part because of its societal and eugenic implications ...
In an extraordinary 6,000-word guest editorial in the October 2024 issue of The CRISPR Journal (a sister journal of GEN, published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.), Fyodor Urnov, PhD, laid out the ...
The CRISPR molecular scissors have the potential to revolutionize the treatment of genetic diseases. This is because they can be used to correct specific defective sections of the genome.
Dr. Jennifer Doudna is Optimistic About Future Applications of Gene-Editing Technology ...