Search Results for: Gene Editing

TGIF: NatGeo sell out, GM Humans, Wild West, Science backstabbing, & more

Wild-West

It’s a shame that National Geographic (NatGeo) has become part of a corporate empire that is not always consistent, to put it nicely, with data-based reality. Can NatGeo maintain its credibility and impact, when it is owned by a climate change denier (quoted for example as dissing folks as “extreme greenies”) who also has other

TGIF: NatGeo sell out, GM Humans, Wild West, Science backstabbing, & more Read More »

Global transhumanism leader Natasha Vita-More on human germline modification

Transhuman-Visions-2-14

In my continuing series of conversations with thought leaders related to heritable human modification, today’s post is an interview with Natasha Vita-More, a pioneer in the transhumanism movement and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Humanity+ (H+), the global transhumanist organization. Where do you see transhumanism today? Has it changed over the years? What

Global transhumanism leader Natasha Vita-More on human germline modification Read More »

Congress: FDA should consult religious experts on embryo CRISPR

Crystal_Structure_of_Cas9_in_Complex_with_Guide_RNA_and_Target_DNA

The US Congress recently held its first hearing on human germline genetic modification. The meeting included CRISPR-Cas9 pioneer Jennifer Doudna (see video here) on the panel. See image of Cas9 structure from Wikipedia. CRISPR-Cas9 is a powerful, strikingly efficient tool for genetic engineering of cells and whole organisms. Now Republican congressional leaders have included a

Congress: FDA should consult religious experts on embryo CRISPR Read More »

Recap of BEINGS 2015 Meeting by Aaron Levine: Shaping Future of Cellular Biotech

aaron-levine_rob-felt_hires

Last week I attended Biotech & the Ethical Imagination (BEINGS 2015), the summit I previewed on this blog back in early May. It many ways the summit lived up to its lofty ambitions. Steven Pinker kicked off the event by emphasizing the power and importance of biomedical research, noting that almost everyone is affected by

Recap of BEINGS 2015 Meeting by Aaron Levine: Shaping Future of Cellular Biotech Read More »

White House supports moratorium on heritable human CRISPR

John_Holdren

The Obama Administration today weighed in on human germline genetic modification such as via CRISPR via a note from John Holdren, Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. The White House indicated support for the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) and the National Academy

White House supports moratorium on heritable human CRISPR Read More »

DIY human ‘upgrades’ via biohacking

biohacking

Heritable human genetic modification has been the topic of the year so far, but another trend is edgy and interesting: non-heritable, but cutting edge forms of human modification that in some ways fall into the class of biohacking. Biohackers are into do-it-yourself (DIY) forms of biology including self-modification. Sure, people have been modifying themselves for

DIY human ‘upgrades’ via biohacking Read More »

Hank Greely Human Germline Modification Post

Week-8-Cover

Hank Greely over at The Center for Law and Biosciences at Stanford Law School was one of the participants in the recent Napa meeting on approaches to human germline genetic modification. Hank was also one of the authors on the resulting position paper in Science with David Baltimore as first author (here). Now Hank, pictured below,

Hank Greely Human Germline Modification Post Read More »

David Baltimore, et al. path for human germline engineering

human-germline-editing-policy

In a new perspectives piece in Science, Nobel Laureate David Baltimore and co-authors including Jennifer Doudna and George Church, chart a potential path forward for human germline engineering. See also accompanying Bioethics piece by Gretchen Vogel as well, “Embryo engineering alarm”. In the piece, entitled “A prudent path forward for genomic engineering and germline gene

David Baltimore, et al. path for human germline engineering Read More »