Three start-ups are aiming to create gene-edited babies. Columnist Michael Le Page has no doubt that editing our offspring ...
Head and neck cancers often begin in the mouth, throat, or voice box. They're among the most common cancers in the world, affecting over half a million people each year and causing about 300,000 ...
An infant with a rare metabolic disease became the world’s first patient to be treated with a personalized CRISPR gene-editing treatment in a landmark study between Penn Medicine and the Children’s ...
CRISPR became big in 2025, bringing advances for serious Indian health risks, which will continue in the coming year ...
Study finds CRISPR/Cas gene editing causes “chromatin fatigue” – another surprise mechanism by which it can produce unwanted ...
CSHL researchers used CRISPR to rapidly domesticate goldenberries, a nutritious but unruly fruit. By editing growth genes, they created plants 35% shorter and easier to harvest, then bred tastier ...
Researchers have used CRISPR to switch back on a gene that vanished from the human lineage roughly 20 million years ago, ...
A team of researchers from Jiangnan University in China has developed a modified fungus that tastes like meat while also ...
Goldcrop cereal variety manager, John Dunne, is a strong advocate for the use of gene editing as a plant breeding tool ...
Three factors will shape development of gene- and other edited therapies over the coming year and beyond. First, commercially speaking, edited therapies still see lower than expected uptake among ...
Scientists are using CRISPR to fast-track the domestication of a wild fruit. For roughly 10,000 years, farming communities ...
Because it requires so little to produce, the new strain could help bring more flavorful, environmentally friendly meat ...