“The Code Breaker”: Jennifer Doudna and how CRISPR can revolutionize humanity

When Jennifer Doudna won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry last year, there was no black ribbon ceremony in Sweden. Due to the pandemic, he picked up the medal in the back garden.

Correspondent David Pogue asked Doudna, “Let’s move on to what’s really important: where do you keep your Nobel?”

“Well, the truth is, I have the replica in my house, just a small frame, and I have the actual medal stored in a safe,” he replied.

Doudna is a biochemist at the University of California at Berkeley. She and her collaborator, Emmanuelle Charpentier, won the Nobel Prize for their 2012 work on a scientific breakthrough that is often described in words as “miraculous”: the gene editing technique known as CRISPR, and the acronym for Short, regularly interspersed palindromic repetitions.

Pogue asked, “How is it in the real world? Is it a computer? Is it software?”

“It’s not a computer and it’s not software. If you looked at it in my lab, you’d see a tube of colorless liquid,” Doudna said.

Two tubes, actually. The first contains molecules designed to bind to a specific gene in the cells of a living thing: a specific part of its DNA. The proteins in the other liquid cut the DNA at that point. “It’s like a zip code that you can go to to find a specific place in a cell’s DNA and literally, like scissors, make a fragment,” Doudna said.

CBS News


Cut DNA like this normally deactivate a gen. We can deactivate a gene that gives us a disease or turn off the gene that limits the amount of skin that cashmere boxes drop or the amount of muscle that a beagle grows.

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