Interesting Engineering on MSN
Home for Christmas: Baby treated with world-first CRISPR therapy takes first steps
A child who received the world's first personalized CRISPR therapy is now taking his first steps after months in hospital ...
Morning Overview on MSNOpinion
How genetic engineering could reshape medicine and human life
Genetic engineering is moving from the lab bench into clinics, farms, and even family planning decisions, promising to change ...
Opinion
A precise tool to edit life: How CRISPR genome editing is changing agriculture and healthcare
Imagine if you could fix a spelling mistake in a long document with just one click. Now, imagine doing the same with the genetic code of a plant or even a human cell. That’s ...
Karthik and her team aimed to use CRISPR as a way to identify and isolate a protein generated by the bacteria that cause Lyme ...
Changing an organism’s genome is a profound act, and the tools you use to make the changes don’t alleviate the need for responsible regulation. Unlike “traditional” genetically modified organisms (GMO ...
Scientists from Kolkata-based Bose Institute have created GlowCas9 -- a CRISPR protein that lights up while performing gene ...
Thanks to CRISPR, our medical specialists will soon have unprecedented control over how they treat and prevent some of our most challenging genetic disorders and diseases. CRISPR (Clustered Regularly ...
Study finds CRISPR/Cas gene editing causes “chromatin fatigue” – another surprise mechanism by which it can produce unwanted ...
Agriculture, from the outset, has been made possible by humans tweaking the genes of plants to make them grow faster, produce ...
Scientists are using CRISPR to fast-track the domestication of a wild fruit. For roughly 10,000 years, farming communities ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results