How Gene Editing Is Changing the World

In ‘Hacking the Code of Life’, Nessa Carey explores advances that are giving us new powers to alter the genome.

Across the US, more than 100,000 people are awaiting organ transplants. But there simply aren’t enough hearts, lungs, livers, and kidneys to meet demand, and 20 people die every day without the organs they need. For decades, scientists have dreamed of using animals to help fill the gap. They’ve been particularly interested in harvesting organs from pigs, whose physiology is similar to our own. Unfortunately, pigs also present some big biological challenges, including the fact that their genomes are chock full of genes that code for what are known as retroviruses, which could pose a serious threat to patients who receive porcine organs.

In 2015, George Church, a geneticist at Harvard University, announced a stunning breakthrough: Working with pig cells, he and his colleagues had managed to disable 62 copies of a retrovirus gene in one fell swoop. “This would have been virtually impossible and a logistical nightmare with older forms of genetic modification,” writes Nessa Carey in her new book, Hacking the Code of Life: How Gene Editing Will Rewrite Our Futures. But by using the new gene editing technology known as Crispr, the task was a relative cinch.

Nessa Carey
Hacking the Code of Life
Icon Books

It’s just one example of how gene editing is giving us the power to alter the genome with unprecedented speed and precision. Carey, a biologist with a background in the biotech and pharmaceutical industry, offers a brisk, accessible primer on the fast-moving field, a clear-eyed look at a technology that is already driving major scientific advances – and raising complex ethical questions

“It’s giving every biologist in the world the tools to answer in a few months questions that some scientists have spent half their careers trying to address,” Carey writes. “It’s fueling new ways to tackle problems in fields as diverse as agriculture and cancer treatments. It’s a story that began with curiosity, accelerated with ambition, will make some individuals and institutions extraordinarily wealthy, and will touch all our lives.”

Though there are several different approaches to gene editing, the most prominent – and the one that really supercharged the field – is Crispr. The technique, based on an anti-viral defence system that’s naturally present in bacteria, requires two pieces of biological material: an enzyme that acts as a pair of minuscule scissors, slicing strands of DNA in two; and a guide molecule that tells the enzyme where to cut.

In bacteria, these guide molecules direct the enzyme to chop up the genomes of invading viruses, preventing them from replicating.

But in 2012 and 2013, two teams of scientists reported that it was possible to hack this system to slice into any strand of DNA, at any complementary location they chose. Researchers could, for instance, create a guide molecule that steered the enzyme to one specific gene in the mouse genome and insert the editing machinery into a mouse cell; the enzyme would then make its cut at that exact spot.

Also Read: Is There More to Gene Editing Than Creating ‘Designer’ Humans?

The cell would repair the severed DNA, but it would do so imperfectly, disabling the gene in question. In the years that followed, scientists refined the technique, learning to use it not only to inactivate genes but also to insert new genetic material at specific locations along the genome.

The approach is cheaper, easier, and faster than older methods of genetic engineering, which were first developed in the 1970s. In addition, as Carey explains, “it can be used to create smaller modifications to the genome, and leaves fewer extraneous genetic elements. In its most technically exquisite form, gene editing leaves no molecular trace at all. It may just change, in a precisely controlled manner, one letter of the genetic alphabet.”

missing heritability problem, gene variants, rare diseases, genome wide association studies, whole genome sequencing, DNA sequencing, body mass index, human body height, polygenic risk score, preprint paper, peer review, genetic variation, heritability,

But in 2012 and 2013, two teams of scientists reported that it was possible to slice into any strand of DNA. Photo: qimono/pixabay

The applications are almost endless. Gene editing has immense potential for basic research; scientists can learn a lot about what genes do by selectively disabling them. In addition, researchers have used the technology to create a wide variety of organisms that could become valuable agricultural commodities, including mushrooms that don’t brown; wheat that produces fewer gluten proteins; drought tolerant, high-yield rice and corn; disease-resistant pigs; and super muscular goats.

How these products will do on the market – if they ever reach it – remains uncertain. Globally, gene-edited organisms are regulated by a patchwork of conflicting rules. For instance, in 2018, the US Department of Agriculture announced that it would not regulate gene-edited crops that “could otherwise have been developed through traditional breeding techniques.” A few months later, however, the European Union said that it would subject gene-edited plants to stringent restrictions.

Beyond agriculture, gene editing has enormous potential for medicine. It might, for instance, become a much-needed treatment for sickle cell disease. That painful, debilitating disease results from a genetic mutation that causes patients to produce a deformed version of haemoglobin, a protein that helps red blood cells transport oxygen. In a clinical trial currently underway, scientists are removing stem cells from the bone marrow of sickle cell patients, using Crispr to edit them, and then infusing the edited cells back into patients.

Also Read: Explainer: What Is CRISPR and How Does It Work?

Even if this trial succeeds, however, gene editing will not be a cure-all. It doesn’t always work perfectly and can be challenging to administer directly to living humans (which is why some scientists are instead editing patients’ cells outside the body). Moreover, many diseases are caused by complex interactions between multiple genes, or genes and the environment. “In fact, many of the most common and debilitating conditions aren’t likely to be good candidates for gene editing any time soon,” Carey writes.

And, of course, the ethics of human gene editing can be enormously fraught. That’s especially true when scientists modify sperm cells, egg cells, or early embryos, making tweaks that could be passed down to subsequent generations. This kind of gene editing could theoretically cure some absolutely devastating genetic conditions, but we still have a lot to learn about its safety and effectiveness. It also raises a host of difficult questions about consent (an embryo obviously cannot give it), inequality (who will have access to the technology?), and discrimination (what will the ability to edit a gene related to deafness mean for deaf people, deaf culture, and the disability rights movement more broadly?).

Even in the face of these questions, at least one scientist has already forged ahead. In November 2018, He Jiankui, a researcher then at the Southern University of Science and Technology in China, shocked the world by announcing that the world’s first gene-edited babies – twin girls, who He called Nana and Lulu – had already been born. Months earlier, when Nana and Lulu were just embryos, He had edited their CCR5 genes, which code for a protein that allows HIV to infect human cells. By disabling the gene, He hoped to engineer humans who would be protected from HIV infection.

Also Read: How a Rogue Chinese Experiment Might Affect Gene-Based Therapies in India

The outcry was swift and harsh. Scientists alleged that He’s science was sloppy and unethical, putting two human beings at unnecessary risk. After all, there are already plenty of ways to prevent HIV transmission, and the CCR5 protein is known to have some benefits, including protecting against the flu. And He had raced ahead of the experts who were still trying to work out careful ethical guidelines for editing human embryos. “He Jiankui has shot this measured approach to pieces with his announcement, and now the rest of the scientific community is on the back foot, trying to reassure the public and to create consensus rapidly,” Carey writes.

Scientist He Jiankui attends the International Summit on Human Genome Editing at the University of Hong Kong in Hong Kong, China November 28, 2018. Credit: REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

Scientist He Jiankui attends the International Summit on Human Genome Editing at the University of Hong Kong on November 28, 2018. Photo: REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

Hacking the Code of Life doesn’t break much new ground, and for readers who have been paying attention to Crispr over the past few years, little in the book will come as a surprise. But it does provide a broad, even-handed overview of how much has already happened in a field that is less than ten years old.

Carey swats down the most dystopian dreams about Crispr, like the prospect that criminals might edit their own DNA to evade justice. She’s similarly skeptical that we’ll end up using the technology to create “super-beings with enhanced genomes that will make them taller, faster, more attractive.”

“We actually understand very little about the genetic basis of these traits and what we do know suggests that it will be very difficult to enhance humans in this way,” she writes.

But she also acknowledges real risks, including the possibility that the technique could be used to create dangerous bioweapons, that gene-edited organisms could destabilise natural ecosystems, and that our new, hardy crops could prompt us to convert even more of the Earth’s undeveloped places into farmland.

None of this means that the technology should be abandoned; it has immense potential to improve our lives, as the book makes clear. But it does mean we need to proceed with caution. As Carey writes, “Ideally, ethics should not be dragged along in the wake of scientific advances; the two should progress together, informing one another.”

Emily Anthes, who has written for Undark, The New York Times, The New Yorker, Wired, and Scientific American, among other publications, is the author of the forthcoming book The Great Indoors.

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

Were the Brains of China’s CRISPR Twins Inadvertently ‘Enhanced’?

He Jiankui attempted to remove a gene called CCR5 to build resistance to HIV in two babies. New research has found that the same ‘edit’ has other consequences.

New Delhi: A Chinese scientist who created an international controversy by claiming to have made the world’s first genetically edited babies may also have inadvertently boosting their memory and cognition.

<>Chinese researcher He Jiankui claimed to have modified the genes of twins Lulu and Nana before their birth, using the gene-editing tool called CRISPR. While He said his intention was to help the babies resist HIV better, new research says it may have affected the babies’s brains as well.

CRISPR can identify and cut specific sections of a gene and remove it from the sequence. It has the potential to remove faulty genes that result in undesirable mutations and can be used to treat diseases.

However, research has been limited to treating existing conditions in adult patients and not to engineer “super-babies”. This is primarily because not enough is known about the DNA or the chemistry to improve them. Most countries have banned genetic editing of human embryos. Even in China, it’s illegal to edit embryos that are over 14 days old.

Also Read: How a Rogue Chinese Experiment Might Affect Gene-Based Therapies in India

He, the Chinese researcher, attempted to remove a gene called CCR5 to build resistance to HIV. The virus requires the CCR5 gene to enter human blood cells.

New research has found that the same ‘edit’ also has other consequences: in one study, scientists found that it makes mice smarter, and that it could also improve brain recovery after stroke and can be linked to greater success in school.

The paper was published by researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles. Alcino J. Silva, one of the neurobiologists part of the research, told Technology Review, “The answer is likely yes, it did affect their brains.”

“The simplest interpretation is that those mutations will probably have an impact on cognitive function in the twins,” he said. Silva said it was impossible to predict the exact effect the genetic editing will have on the twins’s cognition.

“That is why it should not be done,” he said.

Scientist He Jiankui attends the International Summit on Human Genome Editing at the University of Hong Kong in Hong Kong, China November 28, 2018. Credit: REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

Chinese scientist He Jiankui. Credit: REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

He’s experiment was widely criticised globally. The researcher is under investigation and a report by the country’s state-owned media suggested that He might have intentionally evaded oversight in a quest for “fame and fortune”.

While He may not have intended to create “smarter” babies, evidence of the link between CCR5 and cognition has been available since 2016. Silva was also part of the team that produced that evidence, showing that removing the gene from mice improved their memory significantly.

The Chinese geneticist was certainly aware of this link. On November 28, 2018, two days after news of the “gene-edited” babies became public, he was asked about the implications of the gene on the brain, citing the 2016 study.

He responded that the paper need more “independent verification”. The researcher also stated he was opposed to “genome editing for enhancement”.

The new paper found that people who naturally lack CCR5 recover more quickly from strokes. According to Technology Review, people missing at least one copy of the gene “seem to go further in school, suggesting a possible role in everyday intelligence”.

UCLA biologist S. Thomas Carmichael, who led the study, said it is the first to report a function of CCR5 in the human brain and a higher level of education. Calling the results “tantalising”, he said it needs further study.

Also Read: Is There More to Gene Editing Than Creating ‘Designer’ Humans?

The team also underlined the difference between correcting deficits in adult patients and engineering enhancements before a baby’s birth.

While these enhancements could be possible in future, the researchers said that at present, there is a lot to learn about the unintended consequences of gene-editing.

Clinical trials are already underway on stroke patients suffering memory problems. By giving them the anti-HIV drug Maraviroc, researchers are attempting to find it their cognition can be improved.

In India, ethical guidelines prevent research related to germline genetic engineering or reproductive cloning (which is what He attempted). It allows editing the genomes of adult human cells, subject to an approval from the ethics committee.

As The Wire has previously reported, Indian are editing genome cells obtained from patients, largely to develop therapies for blood disorders due to defects in single genes.