One of CRISPR’s Inventors Calls for Controls on Gene-Editing Technology
upstart writes in with a submission, via IRC, for SoyCow1337.
One of CRISPR's inventors has called for controls on gene-editing technology
Regulators need to pay more attention to controlling CRISPR, the revolutionary gene-editing tool, says Jennifer Doudna.[*]
The anniversary is that of the announcement by a Chinese scientist, He Jiankui, that he had created gene-edited twin girls. That was a medical felony as far as Doudna is concerned, an unnecessary experiment that violated the doctor's rule to avoid causing harm and ignored calls not to proceed.
"I believe that moratoria are no longer strong enough countermeasures," she writes, adding that there are "moments in the history of every disruptive technology that can make or break its public perception and acceptance."
But the same advances mean that "the temptation to tinker with the human germline" is not going to go away, Doudna says. That language-tinkering and temptation-makes it clear she thinks designer babies are a Pandora's box we might not want to open.
Doudna specifically calls out Russia, since a scientist there is bidding to use the technology again to make babies.
[*] Wikipedia entry on Jennifer Doudna.
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