US Scientists Try 1st Gene Editing in the Body (apnews.com) 74
Marilynn Marchione, reporting for Associated Press: Scientists for the first time have tried editing a gene inside the body in a bold attempt to permanently change a person's DNA to cure a disease. The experiment was done Monday in California on 44-year-old Brian Madeux. Through an IV, he received billions of copies of a corrective gene and a genetic tool to cut his DNA in a precise spot. "It's kind of humbling" to be the first to test this, said Madeux, who has a metabolic disease called Hunter syndrome. "I'm willing to take that risk. Hopefully it will help me and other people." Signs of whether it's working may come in a month; tests will show for sure in three months.
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They are a lot of really stupid people with high IQ.
Many use the fact that they know they have a High IQ to stop trying to learn new information because they got a number that said that they are smart.
Also there is experience that will come into play, which has a larger factor for someone with an IQ 100 vs an IQ of 120 their experience, education and adaptability will come into play and override a raw ability to learn and information.
If they are genetic traits toward IQ, I expect it would be quite complex n
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Trying to boost a person with an IQ of 90 to say an IQ of 130 probably wouldn't have a real effect on society...
It would mean he would have to resign from office and be replaced in a special election, but the attendant political sniping could bring needed Congressional gridlock. Private enterprise could then accomplish more while everybody is distracted.
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Will he have to be banned from places that don't allow GMO's? Oh wait... every time the wind blows a plant makes a GMO. Methinks all the crap about GMO is poorly understood.
He lives in Phoenix. All it would mean is that he would have to wear a CONTAINS GMO necklace tag when visiting California.
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The Zombie Apocalypse is coming.
More like the episode "And the children shall lead" from Star Trek TOS. Science tried to create a cure for old age and it ended up killing everyone EXCEPT kids!
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The Zombie Apocalypse is coming.
More like the episode "And the children shall lead" from Star Trek TOS. Science tried to create a cure for old age and it ended up killing everyone EXCEPT kids!
Ooops....my bad....."Miri"....
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More like the episode "And the children shall lead" from Star Trek TOS. Science tried to create a cure for old age and it ended up killing everyone EXCEPT kids!
If the cure got rid of all of the old people, then didn't it cure the world of old people?
Dystopian Sci-Fi (Score:3, Insightful)
I tend to view news of such "wonderful and exciting" advances through the lens of wonderment, tinted with cautious fear. Can you imagine that through an IV, someone change the fundamentals of who you are, perhaps against your will? Someone could kidnap and drug you, and months after you wake up with an IV bag attached to you arm, you literally start becoming someone else.
Are you too rebellious and anti-authoritarian? Here, have a timidity cocktail. Are you too smart and logical, and impervious to manipulation via base desires? Here, have the Trump cocktail.
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Killing is extreme (Score:3, Insightful)
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If it's that dystopian, they could just, you know, have the person killed.
That could be a waste of *resources* (resources being you).
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Usually it's just communist and socialist governments that view people as a resource, hence ID cards that tell the cops where you're supposed to be during working hours with truancy laws against people not showing up for work, and building walls that they claim are to keep fascists out while the real purpose is to keep its own citizens from leaving.
Re:Dystopian Sci-Fi (Score:4, Interesting)
There isn't a gene for "be republican" or even "be smart." There are genes that are known to lead to low intelligence, but your'e talking down syndrome level dysfunction.
On top of that, the vast majority of brain development is done in utero.
Suggesting that a dystopian government could simply reprogram a person using crispr is an order of magnitude more ludicrous than saying "Well what if a rogue state hacks the internet and makes all the planes fall out of the sky."
At the very least, a dystopian government even GIVING YOU CANCER with crispr would require millions of dollars in investment.
Rope, tape, a chair, and a baseball bat meanwhile costs maybe $10 if you go to a garage sale and I'm guessing $10k to hire some biker types?
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Mod parent up. Biology is just not that simple.
That's actually not true. For example, see how the DRD4 gene could impart a propensity for risky behavior. This study [newswise.com] was performed almost a decade ago. I have no doubt that further studies would reveal specific genes that could be manipulated to entirely change the behavior of a person.
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Second, the effect is slight. [psu.edu]
Third, as I said, brain development happens in utero. Changing genetics to rewire the brain of an individual you want to influence is nonsense.
I have no doubt that further studies would reveal specific genes that could be manipulated to entirely change the behavior of a person.
It's an understatement to say it's tough to quantify human behavior (hence the misleading study saying DRD4 is a risk-causing gene), but lets take it for granted you can tell if a person is going to have the desired behavior.
The necessary
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Obligatory C&H (if that's a thing): http://explosm.net/comics/556/ [explosm.net]
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That's the ultimate goal...comprehensive embryonic screening...detect and abort the freaks before they have a birth certificate mandate to drain our resources
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Give it up. (Score:2)
Give it up.
Your buggy whip manufacturing jobs are gone.
They're not coming back.
Be like a millennial: find something to spend your time on that doesn't actually produce things, and follow your bliss.
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Bad example maybe? Doesn't seem to have happened. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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Bad example maybe? Doesn't seem to have happened. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
There are many other examples...
http://listverse.com/2009/06/2... [listverse.com]
Pessimism is the first step to facism. (Score:1)
Becaus change is good.
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Jesse Gelsinger (Score:2)
Adenovirus therapy caused the death of Jesse Gelsinger [wikipedia.org] in 1999.
The resulting moratorium caused extreme damage to the the field of gene therapy, the institutions involved in it, and the careers of those practicing and studying it.
It has also been recently proven that CRISPR causes hundreds/thousands off-target changes in mice [geneticlit...roject.org].
This seems rash.
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How much of you is genetics? And which gene in what sequence represents given traits?
Actually finding genes that represent physical traits is at best difficult but possible. Altering genes which make up core personalities is difficult be a use of nature vs nurtures very real.
Read up on gut bacteria and how that affects your metabolism, and weight and multiple that by a 1000 before we start drastically editing personalities with predictable results.
We are century away from that kind of worry.
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Altering genes which make up core personalities is difficult be a use of nature vs nurtures very real.
No, that's definitely not the reason.
The reason is that, once grown your medial frontal gyrus, which makes the "what/when/where" go/no-go decisions is already grown.
Unless you intend to dike it out and grow a new on in its place, those genes have already been spent to create tissue that has a particular preference for function.
Just like the hippocampus and amygdala would have to be diked out and regrown, in order to change someone base sexuality.
Re: Dystopian Sci-Fi (Score:2)
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The reason is that, once grown your medial frontal gyrus, which makes the "what/when/where" go/no-go decisions is already grown.
It's not quite that simple. Changing genes in a developed brain isn't going to change gross structure, but it could well change low-level biochemical behavior, perhaps changing the levels of specific neurotransmitters, or changing the way that the brain forms new connections or breaks old ones.
It seems unlikely that gene editing could turn a Republican into a Democrat, but it doesn't seem so unlikely that it could turn a happy person into a severely depressed one, or maybe seriously decrease (or increase?
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The reason is that, once grown your medial frontal gyrus, which makes the "what/when/where" go/no-go decisions is already grown.
It's not quite that simple. Changing genes in a developed brain isn't going to change gross structure, but it could well change low-level biochemical behavior, perhaps changing the levels of specific neurotransmitters, or changing the way that the brain forms new connections or breaks old ones.
It seems unlikely that gene editing could turn a Republican into a Democrat, but it doesn't seem so unlikely that it could turn a happy person into a severely depressed one, or maybe seriously decrease (or increase?) the ability to form new long-term memories, etc. Of course, those same things can be done with drugs.
It's highly unlikely that the gene expression can be permanently changed at that level. You could certainly damage organelles to achieve that effect -- long term Marijuana and LSD use is known to permanently alter brain chemistry -- it's just not at a genetic level.
All our current crop of Alzheimers and vascular dementia drugs operate through direct action, rather than indirect action.
I understand that some people believe in epigenetic effects, but the only place they've been demonstrated is on rather simp
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Are you too rebellious and anti-authoritarian? Here, have a timidity cocktail. Are you too smart and logical, and impervious to manipulation via base desires? Here, have the Trump cocktail.
Considering we don't even know which genes make people tall or short, I'm not concerned.
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Someone could kidnap and drug you, and months after you wake up with an IV bag attached to you arm, you literally start becoming someone else.
Or something else.
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I tend to view news of such "wonderful and exciting" advances through the lens of wonderment, tinted with cautious fear. Can you imagine that through an IV, someone change the fundamentals of who you are, perhaps against your will? Someone could kidnap and drug you, and months after you wake up with an IV bag attached to you arm, you literally start becoming someone else.
Are you too rebellious and anti-authoritarian? Here, have a timidity cocktail. Are you too smart and logical, and impervious to manipulation via base desires? Here, have the Trump cocktail.
Unlike in Hollywood, ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny.
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vi Brian Madeux (Score:2)
$vi Brian Madeux
:%s/badgene/goodgene/g
:wq
He's all cured.
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you forgot
$ sudo newgenes
Scarily, apparently this treatment doesn't require elevated privileges.
The firewall in the human body is easy to breach and once you get your genetic code in there, it apparently runs with the same privileges as any other code. Also, nobody knows how to patch against this exploit...
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So yeah, genes do need some "elevated privileges" to run :)
If there were privileges involved, there wouldn't be things like cancer...
Think of inserting misinformed proteins like an SQL injection attack.
Of course there is partitioning of using the wrong genetic information which protects against well-formed requests, but there isn't actually any privilege levels per-se...
Shouldn't've let the press get hold of this. (Score:3)
They're just going to get people pissed off when they dissect the guy for the research paper.
I hope this works (Score:2)
God I hope this works... (Score:2)
tests will show for sure in three months. (Score:2)
... but since idea is "BRILLIANT" let's post it right away.
Shhh I would try it.... (Score:1)
They mean the first for this technique (Score:2)
Side effects include flu-like symptoms (Score:2)