Synthetic Biologist Aims to Create Pig with Human Lungs
By Lisa M. Krieger,
San Jose Mercury News
| 11. 14. 2014
Untitled Document
SAN FRANCISCO -- In a provocative cross-species experiment, scientists are striving to rewrite the pig genome so the animal grows lungs that could be transplanted into humans.
"We are re-engineering the pig, changing its genetic code," said genome pioneer Craig Venter at SynBioBeta 2014, an annual synthetic biology conference in San Francisco. "If we succeed with rewriting the pig genome, we will have replacement organs for those who need them," he said Friday.
His team at Synthetic Genomics is designing the project, he said, creating on computers the code needed to build the hybrid. By changing as few as five genes, they have created lungs that survived for a year in baboons, he said.
In other major news at the conference, Google confirmed that Stanford University bioengineer Drew Endy has joined its team at the secretive Google X, which created such projects as Google Glass, driverless cars and high-altitude Wi-Fi balloons.
The hiring of Endy, brought to Stanford's School of Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, suggests that Google seeks to explore the design and construction of...
Related Articles
By Françoise Baylis and Katie Hasson, The Conversation | 10.24.2024
By Fyodor Urnov, The CRIPSR Journal | 10.18.2024
The field of clinical gene editing has a bona fide crisis on its hands—a crisis that has to, and can be, promptly resolved.
An outside observer of our field might be surprised by this and say—what crisis? The first...
By Walt Bogdanich and Carson Kessler, The New York Times | 10.23.2024
By 2021, nearly 2,000 volunteers had answered the call to test an experimental Alzheimer’s drug known as BAN2401. For the drugmaker Eisai, the trial was a shot at a windfall — potentially billions of dollars — for defanging a disease...
By Gina Kolata, The New York Times | 10.21.2024
Kendric Cromer, 12, left Children’s National Hospital in a wheelchair on Wednesday, wearing a T-shirt and cap printed with designs from the anime series “Naruto” and a black face mask. Staff lined the hallway, cheering and waving noisemakers. He had...