Morning Overview on MSN
New CRISPR leap could transform treatment for genetic diseases
Gene editing has moved from theory to bedside with a speed that would have seemed impossible a decade ago. A new wave of ...
A new CRISPR approach can control genes without cutting DNA, opening a safer path for treating genetic diseases. A newly ...
Climate Compass on MSN
CRISPR and the future: Can we edit out genetic diseases?
We're living in a moment where science fiction is becoming medical reality. Imagine a world where doctors can simply rewrite the genetic code that condemns someone to a lifetime of suffering.No more ...
On a special episode (first released on June 20, 2024) of The Excerpt podcast: With the advent of CRISPR as a gene editing technology, there are new opportunities to develop breakthrough treatments ...
Beam Therapeutics advances base-editing pipeline with risto-cel studies and FDA designations, but no approved products and rising competition loom.
Stanford researchers and their collaborators have revealed a new device that could change the way scientists conduct gene-editing experiments. The device, CRISPR-GPT, is an artificial intelligence lab ...
CRISPR is a gene-editing tool that acts like “molecular scissors,” but using it on cancer is complex. The technology’s biggest impact so far is in research labs, helping scientists understand how ...
CRISPR gene editing revolutionized the cell and gene therapy (CGT) industry this past decade, but the industry still faces significant bottlenecks and gaps between development and manufacturing that ...
CRISPR Therapeutics reached a significant milestone a couple of years ago: its first product approval. The company’s stock, ...
Scientists are using CRISPR to fast-track the domestication of a wild fruit. For roughly 10,000 years, farming communities ...
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